laminae-w. a. l-laa Dill! (lauded Ill?) L- ‘ F . IMPORTANT Manama ‘lbnighvs meeting of potato pro- aucdrs and shippers in the Prince of Wales College hall may mark a milehtonc‘. in the industry in this Prwlncmanditis , "that tnero will be a very large and rep- resentative attendance. The purpose of the meeting bi to submit for ap- - provpl the scheme for the establish- ment of apotato marketing board, l as drafted at a meeting of the five , -eastern Provinces at Ottawa last week and approved by the Domin- ton v Marketing Boa-rd. The objects of the scheme, as outlined, are to reduce the surplus of marketable potatoes and to ss- ourerfor the producer a fair return by bringing the industry under the . provisions of the Dominion Mark- etinguact, passed at the last session P. Vlcslvcaldan, . .]uaq¢s, . . DA Iacllllal. ‘l-(I. ‘~. '8‘ . D lllrvotavé-Jl Iuraetnlll. Associate Editors-Isaak Walks: and l) l. Olrsla. ll cl yafl- (ll advance) an uaa. 1 Ol-I n: sear iia saunas) 3011047: ' Oaaada aaa United laatsa. h; sgnlnsnsr. xovhusn 1. ' ms oiltapoken comment. This will not prevent correspondents-has not duty, often st great personal risk. "Many of us would never have given orb-lives to Jouzrnalisnr if we thought that our task was merely to cater for sensation or scandal. How many times. for-prample, have the life stories of, criminals been retold? l-‘vll exists, crime alas, is perpetraicd, and it is our duty to make the newspapers the mirror of the day's news and to assist the law-as we continually dc-Ld track- ing wrongdoers. "But why resurrect those who have already passed to judgment? "we are the Fourth mists of the Realm. ‘This thought is at once a source 0f pride and a challenge. It means that in all things we must so order our ways that authenticat- , Vented them-dram doing their. 7' 0f Parliament. Among the no potatoes shall be marketed; pso- hibitioin of consignment shipments ing o! dealers; insistence on unl- forzn quotations and fair trade increasing potato consumption: andkievclorpment of export markets lislunent of a Marketing Board for wick, Ontario and Quebec, two members to be appointed from each province, and, in addition, for an advisory committee of producers to be selected to work in conjunc- tionqwlth the ofllclal representatives of the Board in each province. At the last meeting held in Charlottetown there was no doubt as to the desire of all present to see established some system of market control in the potato in- dustry. There was considerable dif- ference of opinion, however, ss to the personnel of the proposed local board and the jurisdiction of the Prov-mole! Board. Now that a new scheme has been drafted to meet the requirements of the five east- em.‘ provinces, and much additional mfqrmation has been obtained as _toiiiooilerationofthe.act.wemay upset to see more conccie results from tonight's deliberations. In any event, it h essential that our farm- liumbers, that they ‘ them- selves with the provisions of the scheme, and that all concerned will bear in mind the urgency of the-situation, and the need of co- bpefating in the fullest possible de- LIWE MUST BE FREE Rfesterday we refer-red to the suc- _. cessful Governmental attempts in . difnvlont countries to muzzle the Press. and to the offer of the Qoiernment of Quebec to subsidila all.'_flie weekly newspapers in that province, irrespective of party af- fililtiomltlsthe thinendoltllb wedée. and we sincerelyhope the Quebec weekly newspaper publish- ers will resolutely turn it down. The Press must be free, or there is an"end-of freedom for the mass of UIGMpGOpIB. In this connection, the address of ' j min. .1. Whittick, no.1. President of the Institute of Journalists at "iiho annual meeting last month, strikes the right note. He said: "One of the gravest aspects con- fronting us is the extent towhich thsTfroedom of the Press has been encioached upon. This is an issue which constitutes a. menacing chal- IenQe-a challenge which we shall" aoifsmrr. Indeed, we our: ii at, 01:13. peril and at the periloi thal pemlmbecause a free Press is in- dead the rock oi their liberty. ‘#9 know that two-thirds of the worldlfpeople are under the iron ‘raiser. censorship must arouse in this free coimtry‘ the gravest mis- Ilving. The position baffles dc- acription and it is unquestionably "athrowbacktofllallfllwhflnmm nursed. thci-r fears, t. bled before ‘opiirsssion and were afraid even c! thoughts which,_by a Divine anew-awn. are given w each and c ail-as the elemental function of -: ‘I I. l. l. steps proposed to be taken to achieve these ends are regulation of the movement of grades below which Ia revision o! the, [not even placed before the annual ed news and sincere comment are never jeopardised." EDITORIAL NOTES We'll all be ‘ ‘ey-minded from in interprovincial trade and licens- now on. Potato industry meets knight to practices; publicity with a view in consider Marketing Board. SirRobertBordenandPremiQr 'f‘he‘srzheme provides for the estab- Bennett divide honours in the esti- mation of British statesmen. Evi- the five provinces oi Prince ndwdni dently m. Mackenzie Kine must Island, Nova. Scotia, New Bruns- look to Washington for fame. Organisation meetings are the order of the day. The Women's Music club confer at the Canadian National Hotel tomorrow afternoon. Tho Oaledonian Club have a. com- mitioc appointed for 5t. Andrews dinner in the same hotel on N0- vember 30; the Boy Scouts annual meetingfis called for the Oity Hall, on Monday, 5th inst.; the Protest- am orphanage maintella ‘w collec- tion begins liaonday- Is the Bennett fiscal policy a suc- cus? Ask USA. industrialists. Since Mr. Bennett's policy went um force, more fl-ian 1,500 United States companies have opened branch plants in Canada. The Am- erican Manufacturers Export As- sociation has issued a auestionaine aakingfthese isco odd companies to Jturnish information covering the guccssg of these Canadian unit-s. craattendthemeeting inlargs ‘Ihcsilrve-yisexpeotiedlodevelfli! ‘ l m‘ m f9- garding the extent of the success of Canada's Imperial preference in curtailing the U.B.A. export busin- ss to Canada. If the Proposal to settle 20,000 Assyrians from Iraq in British Guiana matcrializca- it will make thatcountlyoneofthemost mixed nationalities on the continent. The iota! population is about 300,000, made up in round figures as fol- lows: British, Portuguese, Msdeirans and other whites, 15,000; blacks 1.17.000; East Indians 127,000; Chin- ese, 2,000; aborigines 0,000; mixed races 34,000. The salubrity cf the interior of British Guiana is pro- verbial. The natural drainage is so perfect that all impurities are swept off by torrents of rain, and thepillltyoftheairissogreat that the planets of ,_ Venus and Jupiter may be seen in the day time. If a. practical ‘ be wanted- of the failure of ltinritime Union it is to be found in the formation here of the Provincial Fisherrnenu Union, as a breakaway from the Maritime Fisherman's Union. Mr. McCarthy asserts that the Marl- ime Unimi was not long in. exist- ence till he saw it was impossible to reconcile the interests of tins province with those of the other two provinces. Not one iota of bene- fit to this Province. had been re- ceived, and a resolution asking for itutlon was oonwntioal. This ‘clearly demon- l is Mr. Wells has otltainly many people lack not so much the powertothinkasthewilltothink for themselves. The fault is in themselves that they are under- liars. long-suffering humanity h fully prepared to award s. gold medal or other mark oi grateful recognition to the anonymous inventor who, according to lmglish advices, has perfected a humans collar-button which is guaranteed not to torture the wearer by digging into his neck and which, because of being at- tached permanently to the, shirt, cannot roll under the bed or the dressing-table-Brockvillg Recorder. Apasnphletiaanedbythelrlt- imWu-Oiilcesaysthatinthe an enemy goverrrm ‘ to protocol, the chances are that, an- other war would see it used- aplenty. When the guns boom out, asking nations not to do this or not to do that in warfare, would it not be much more to the point if they all refrained from warfare? This is really the only way to slop the use 0f poison gas or any other weapon. Raymond Poincare served his country well. He was. like Clem- enceau, like Briand. like Barthou and Doilmertlle. one of the few great French politicians of our time, who can be compared to the W888i K1088 and the most trusty ministers of the pro-revolutionary history of hence. His family was traditionally Republican. He was taught at an early age the value of rmdera-tion in Judgment, clarity of thought and the sense oi reality which makes for constructive minds. Mcthodicsl as ha was, Poincare could have had great success in op- position. None of the inevitable fail- ures would have missed his crit- icism. But he despised that line of conduct and lirance was happy in finding hlrn wise, intelligent, exact and unswerving at a. time when national disaster threatened, when the middle clue was starnpeded by granola-l panic-Le Canada, Mon- Mr. Upton Sinclair's plan to and poverty in California by giving the unemployed access to farms and factories ,whcre they may , ‘ what they need to consume. is re- ported to be driving capital in fright from the state and attracting hundreds of the workless from other states. 'l'he Democratic can- didate for Governor is said to be chafing under the efiticism of him- self and his program, and it, is asimied that his campaign is em- barrassimg the President. Perhaps some of the more conservative Democrats are secretly hoping that the next Governor of California may again be a. Republican. Igor Sikorsky, airplane designer, is a cheerful person. He told the federal aviation commission of the United States that flying boats now being developed could destroy New York City in a fen! minutes by dropping bombs at the rate of five or six a second, and enemy air- planes could destroy any American coast city if they could get within a thousand miles of the land. He said the only defence would be sim- ilnr ships to battle the enemy in mid-ocean. Another witness said he could, with present available equipment, fly from Tokio to New York in 48 hours, and if the Unit- ed States had a. war in the Orient of Militia, General 5am Hughes, and Col. Leigh named. The Colonel entered with enthusiasm into his duties, and visited, with speakers provided by the Patriotic Society, every part cf the Province. This entailed expense, and the money was provided by the Guardian through appeals to its readers. 8pc- cial trains, brass bands, concert parties-ail were resorted to in order to attain the objective, till at length conscription took the place oi voluntary service, and the Patriotic Society ceased to operate. The Saar Valley situation is this. At the time of drafting the Ver- saillcs Treaty, France urged that as a guarantee that Germany would implement her treaty obligations the coal and iron section of the country known as the Rhinelsnd and the Palatinate should be held and occullied by Allied troops. Brit- ain and the United States opposed length the Allies agreed to a ten year occupancy. with a further five years of ‘- ‘ependcnce with the right people of the icrriuwy it‘ ‘the ofthatperiod to decide by census whether they would lo- main ' ‘ dent or retum to German allegiance. Early in the post-war period, Britain found the military occupation obnoxious and withdrew her force, but France ro-. mained the full period, evacuatin_ "with military pomp and circum- stance" on June l0, 1000. The iivs years of independence expires in January. "id Francs is naturally anxioim that the pwple of the fer- ritcry will vote for its continuance, while Gummy is hopeful and ansiail that they will renew thair allegiance. Hence the rwopaganda Germany and circulated through &“ v-vVIQQIViy-\I~""\v'~o cor-r couraging to others who do not claim more than average brains, for made Kood useofhisheadltmaybethat event of war Britain would 1oqueat| misc 1 blan- V-luaalll. nous! aromas One of th emost painful conditions with whichrnan is afflicted is a stoneatthesntrancaofthetubc which carries the urine from the kidney to the bladder, or a atone that gets caught in this tube. These stones are called renal (kidney) or ureteral (twill) stones or calculi. '1'!“ Pain is so severe that mor- phine is usually necessary to give the patient relief. Operation for re- moval of these stones demands con- isiderablc Judgment and skill on the _ part of the surgeon. ~ ' The best treatment betwen these attacks of pain, or "colic" as it is called, is now receiving careful con- sideraticn by physicians as there has been a great increase in the number of cases in recent years. Home of these methods are the ‘p10 not to use gas. Though the use qr dilating or enlarging of the tubes or, preservation of peace, yetit gas is prohibited by ti“; Geneva, uretus, drugs to make these tubcs| not been much noticed because it aaat 0f squeeze their contents downwards, and tubes by giving large amounts of volatile oils. the use of glycerinc to drive out or expel the stones; ii: stimulates the peristalllc or squeezing action of the tubes so that the stones are squeez- ed downwards; it has a stimul " making them manufacture or secrete more urine; it has a lubricating or loosening action on the tubes and, to some extent at least, it dissolves or reduces the airs of the stone so that it will pass down more readily. Dr. Lickint points out that small doses will result in failure and he advises giving about an ounce and a half of giycerine three times daily for three successive days. He never irbservcd undesirable results after the use of glycerlne. He was able in obtain the removal of the stone 1n fourteen out of sixteen patients to whom he gave the time mentioned. Dr. ‘A. M. Crane has found the fol- lowing manipulation very successful in dislodginfg moderate-sized stones in the tubes. A catheter (a rubber or flbro tube) is left in the tube which extends from the kidney or blad- der-for 24, 48, or '12 hours. As this catheter is about to be withdrawn sterile water is injected up the catheter to s point a little past its entrance into the kidney. The cathe- ter is then withdrawn. The lnJection of the water and the withdrawal of the catheter at the same time often dislodge the stone. this, but France was insistent. At the enemy could do the same. All of which appears to be a good reason for an earnest desire in the United States to promote peace-Ex. Flfty-seven nations, exclusive of Soviet Russia, have subscribed to the covenant of the league of Na- tions. Two nations have given the required two years’ notice of inten- tion to withdraw, Japan and Ger- many. The newest and busiest town In Canada is that of Jeliicoe, Ontario, where a rich find of gold has re- cently been made. A real estate boom is on and miners are rushing to get their dwellings erected before winter sets in. So far there are no taxes, but there are no civic im- provcmenis which taxes represent. Hitler's interference German Protestant Church through the medium of Reichblshop Miullcr is not turning out very happily. Not only are the ousted bishops and pastors gaining warm popular support. but there are also disen- sions in the ranks of the Nazi Christians. Dr. Jaegcr, who is ad- visory counsel to Dr. Mueller. seems to be the storm centre of the controversy. The ecclesiastical cabinet, has been broken up, ob- visusly in an effort to increase Dr. Muellcrh dictatorial r powers. The revolt against the Fuehrer may ye: take a secular form-Philadelphia Inquirer. A meal every thrce days. This ls the habit formed in the course of twenty years, of Plrsenti Ibrahim Effendi. Guests in a restaurant on the Isle of Prinkipc, in the Mar- mors sea, were greatly surprised when he ordered a treble dinner together with a 2 1-2 pound loaf of bread. To the proprietor. who was amazed at his guest's enormous ap- petite, Efiendl explained that he had Just returned from Northern Siberia. where he had been taken prisoner by the Russians in an early stage of t-‘hc World War. Among the nomads his food had consisted of cod liver oil and the fats of other fishes. He formed the habit of taking a. meal every three days. He is 65 years old, very healthy, and will continue this habit for the rest of his life. IOIJTUDE This is a lonely place, And old in dreams; the woods Ibld in their wide embrace Unravished aolitudes. Bare, while still evening falls And the grey light grows less, Peace builds the shadowy walls 0f ancient quietness. Her hands uproar the gloom, And cvermore round me ‘me vsat unahatterd room G night grows silently. In has such mighty guests ‘lb furnish for mil , Poi- have old Qaturn rests, , And Time oodles home to sleep. 1 .<§yly. increased flooding of the kidneysl effect upon the kidneys themselves, smmauon m “w”, 1g m; gm- with the m, TT Th W Scare Passes (Winn! Pres Press)‘ m 10:. “Jdmfia uniting lapsed W001! “"1" the outbreak of war- Arahdllka llardinand was shot at ssraivvo on June 28 and Austria declared war snsei-aisdnaulym-Awsaklaler- that Hungary was partly to blame. Jugoslsvia was dissuaded throng ithe good ofiicesof thelieaglle , Nations. This was perhaps a eru- ciai step by the loague for h": vwas s strictly negative perform- arice. 4 The absence of ultimatums and rules mean very little. IIIJtBBd of fluids-winter mostly. and the use a! or mobilization orders is a hopeful sign but calm is not yet restored in Dr- F- Linklnt. Munich. suggests‘ Europe, id iddge cynic latest dis~ the obsolete patches. A ferocious pursuit of "terrorists" is going on and caus- ing international complications. It looks a. little as if the mropaan Governments were making the ss- war, for ‘ " numerous per- sons known to hold radical opin- ions. Snowden In Canada (Ottawa. Journal) Cabled extracts from ths second volume of Viscount Snowdsnb Auto- biography, Just published in London, seemtcindicate surpriseonhispart that at the Imperial Conference of 1930 a Canadian should have been the dominating personality. Lord Snowden then was Mr. Philip Bnow- den, Chancellor d: the lbrchequer, no doubt he thought he was cap- iable of doing whatever directing needed to be done, and the vigor and determination shown by Mr. Ben- nett were disconcerting. Roaders of the first volume of the Autobiography will he able to under- stand the Snowden viewpoint. Lord Snowden made a tour of Canada in 11914, of which he tells in that boit, and his opinion of this country was not yew favorable. He entered at Miontrcal, travelled as far ‘West as the Rockies, turned South than into the United Bbatcs. presently went to Vancouver to take a ship for New Zealand. At that time he had been a member of the British Parliament for years, he was an agg fig- ure in the British Socialist party, a man of wide reading, a student of public and economic affairs. And yet his observations on this D0- minion show that he had not the slightest conception of Canada's de- velopment and problems or of the Canadian character. Of Montreal he has nothing to say; of ‘lbs-onto only that it had beautiful suburbs. He did not come to mtawa. The country frinn Tor- onto to Winnipeg he foimd "most monotonous and uninteresting." He approves of a sunset on the Great Lakes. Winnipeg he recalls as the place where he met some fellow- Yorkshiremen. He becomes quite enthusiastic over Lake Louise, but Vancouver was just a point on the p. Lord Snowden mentions the "state legislatures" of Manitoba and Alberta. He was in Winnipeg during a provincial election campaign, and he offers this remark: "I hope things are better now, but the stories we were told all over Canada of the corruption of poli- tical and public life surpassed any- thing I have heard of the United States . . , In a new country the political machine is apt to get into the hands of men who have some axe of their own to grind." The press in Canada displeased him mightily, although persistently he lumps ‘ ‘L for ’ “ the news papers of Canada and the United States. Speaking of an incl- dent in Winnipeg he declares that "the experienced traveller in Ameri- ca never refuses the prsssmarvs rc- ouest for an interview. The inter- view will a/ppear in anv case, and it is likelv to be less ob‘ tionable if ha has treated the pressman with respect." And then he proceeds to nrove this absurd generality by cit- ing an experience of his own in the state of Oregon! Lord Snowden re- turned to England in J y, 1915, and he sans he was quite outofiouch with thincs because such information as he had been able to acquire had reached him "from garbled and un- reliable reports in the Dominion and American press." Snowden! mind obviously record- ed nothing but the most shallow and superficial impressions of his Can- adian tour. He never went below the surface. nor apparently did he snake any effort to study or understand this country. His annoyance must _ have been extreme. then. when this Domini s med tosend to hon- don a. Prime infer "of forceful ” “ mfvieormis spsechwith a definite policy." These are precisely the qualities on which ford Iinuw- den pridesfhimsalf. and inevitably the viewsofthe twowerenot al- wavs in accord. Cqnadd At War Years Ago Written far The. Canadian Press taisi W. W. Manny, M. 0- 1084. by The Can- Bea dsil-snishlng went on divisions of the war- when, 20 gears ago_ today the news flashed to Iloaldon that a superior cruising squadron had d‘; motaBritishforceintho south Pacific and all but wiped it out. ‘libs Battleof Coronal, fought in sunset and, evening of Nov. 1. 1914 the southern tip of South America. was a stunning shock to the British. But it was to be swiftly avenged at the Iilalkland Isles. . ‘Ilie British squadron consisted of armored cruwer , hundreds of miles away at the time of the engagement; the old armored cruisers Good Hope and. Monmouth, both lost with Rear-Admiral Sir Christopher Orndock and 1.850 officers and men; the light cruiser Glasgow whim esc * with inidrv: and: the armed liner Otnanio which took no hcrst and Geiscnau and the light u-uisers Leipzig. Nurberg and under the flag of Admiral Grsf Von Spec. It has been active commission for izwo years, whereas the two foremost British Qups, the Good Hope and Mon- moufm, had been out of commission when war broke, her crews un- trained. The activities of the Japanese Navy had forced von Spec towards the south Pacific where, on the coast of the South American republics he established cooling and provixonlng stations. Cradock had sailedi from Halifax early in August. working down around Cape l-Ioni, and was steaming up the ccastofChilc Just before the engagement POUGHT IN SETTING SUN ‘file British heard the German wholes clearly at 1.50 p. m. on Nov. 1. ‘Ilhe enemy was sighted at 4.20, but it was not until 5.55 that the British squadron-with the exceptic of the far distant Canopus, relegated to convoy-was gathered in line. Owdock and vpn Bpec steamed south cn parallel coilrseswivith the Germans between the British and’ the coast. Cradoci might have deferred action until he Joined the Canopus, whose guns might have turned the scale. But it would have meant the sacrifice of the slow. corri- paraltively dc-fenceless, Otranto. He tried to force mion while the sun was still high hiliifid the British but von Spec refused to close un- til the sun was setting in a red glare that silhouetted the British ships. The Otranio, with no guns to fight and no weed b0 run away- drew out of line. Firingstadedabout7pm. The Germans at once inflicted damage. Shell after shell roglsicrcd hits on the throe British cruisers, while the British gunners strived des- perately to hit vessels they could barely see in the gathering night to the eastward. The Ge darkness drew on, aided by the fires their accuraxo gunnery had lighted in the Brit- ish drips. The result was inevitable. Within an hour the Good Hope was a gut- ted hull, 85 shots registered on her. The " ‘“ and tho Glasgow, also heavily hit, turned away. The unfortunate Monmouth, badly list- ing, was found by the Number-g which dcqisiohed her with flags flaring. The Glasgow managed to leave the stricken field. The Otranto had already worked m.’ ~s to the south. On their part the British inflicted little damage, but they fought a valiant fight in ships weak in guns and gunnery. Ilsa Ilnarsva for Bore Feet WE SELL AND RECOMMEND MAGS Special Rx. 315 Cod Liver Oil Extract, with Crecaote and Guiacol Compound. A real tunic for Coughs, _Colds, lnlnonn and (impe- Itlsbettcr than ordinary cough medicinal. because it ‘ the seat of trouble, rc- ‘can l“? P!“ ' Arum. lievca the cough and supplies continual treatment to build 1,, DevilFishes And i l... *.....‘i... '° Y," . are " gnsls um RDQCIK BU a something is mas W1 7°" system. Whats is the cause Burdock Bio d h mnsnuvtlll bring relief. This great h.“ nmsdy right to the root 0g disorders an restores the blessin of normal health, free from aches “a 13,1“. Bosommcnded for 57 years. Broom in stern in minty-five, Bucking went down. and performed the very notable dcoibsea diving fest d: working the lifting cables under her into a better Position for the Job. Thawatarwlaicyooldbyreasondf the glaciers not far away, and him’ dense wilglkletha alaoiainsiitxun black milcsirom. clouds. some aw 0s." And story, leaving plenty to the X01461”! m. Hucklns saw we bones of the imsginstionmut not forgetting little drowned Islanders Pflple where touches such as shall they have been lying in their coffin shark, and ship all those years. ‘ But is was another adventure of Idiufluckinhin thdlalvlglngofthe Islander that is now in the folntion more relevant to these presents. iis had a fislrt with an octopus, with two of them, down there in the hold or the sunken ship, where the en. crusted bamacles were two feet thick on the plates. One of ihs devil-fish was sixteen feet across. (Vancouver Province)- This sharpcn appetitcs and then we a tale of the d that was a of salvaginlgmltlhc ‘gsldagder. Blbigmh lying ‘now an on s of the Alaska Coast. after thirty- three years in 8S0 feet of water in Illtevens Passage. near Douglas and. The story of the, salvaging 0! u" Islander is rich in the romantic lore of the sea. The two ‘aalvade ‘ dropped great cables under, and then lifted her‘ on the lift of suc- m cessive tides, dragging her inshore into shallower water. a little at a time. When they got her with her bow in 145 feet of water and her The second one had a diameter of twenty eight or thirty feet. Mr. Huckins had his spear sent down for dealing with these devil-fish, and ho dealt with them. conclusively, ai- though he does not ssy that his killed them. ll: made a good newspaper story, as newspapers stories go in these drab times. Perhaps the oynics who used to snort at the tales of Caddy the sea smlant of Victoria. will be more respectful about our Strange local beasts of the sea, after this. Perhaps. on the other hand. they won't. Perhaps they will only look down their skeptical “noses Oncq more. and say “dsvil-fish-bshl finger sharks Mild sharks, more likely." But who cares what the cynics say? Buy the‘ Bests _ TEA Brahmin Orange Pekoe I Ceylon Small Leaf color. - able. Manufacturers c: Attention. [Fox Y Rancher! "Let's Speak of Felts” Prepare your foxes ‘for pelting season by lib- era] feeding of IMPERIAL FOX BISCUITS. No fox food can surpass them in promoting growth of superior thick-skinned peltsof finest texture, fully furredwvith diamond-like sheen, retaining their beautiful and desirable prime If not now feeding “IMPERIALS,” delay no longer for delays are dangerous and unprofit- “For highest priced 15cm, feed “IMPERIALS " i IMPERIAL Biscuit COMPANY, Ltd. Charlottetown, P, E. I. A‘l‘ CIT-re Two Macs -IIIIOIIQIPIQIIII“Y ANUlll-lo.