Sill 'i; P in l ii. l_ ' Ml. .~f-~r~.-_~`.°-§ , ~ 1-.;- _,- -:tae-< ._.,_ ._-_,~ -“~= :J '-gs. ‘ ' ,.l Syl ‘I lv ‘ .. , IM; .4 ‘rr gg l ._.,_.-.. If-“.§_.‘l"l" Ti. =.*ill‘, ».‘ "lip, .~ If ' .-5. ici.; ; -ilijlafli ‘ iz 3 z_i"II.d‘ff f i 1 's~.~ =: 3; - . ~~l:~ » je .. . :‘l`, `,;i ll. '.1 ,oss-, lf. gl; Jw , . .;.’, l . .ll -t ._ll..' -g-vw i;`§' .,1.¢. _ ll... . r '. .\l- _rl 3 _ iii' -ul l»,i . _,Y \.~ sm- f"- 1 _ iii’-~ii' 1: .nil »- 'iii iff: . i. i-,fiiiu ‘ ~,'.=i.t', 5; »;ll\;?[` ; ,,»,..l \-'ii r l alii i`: iii »i 'ii lffiilw -`~ ‘tu i.- lii . "- ,..,.,. fif_$~ - . . `.l `-' .-'i' .- ‘lii xi Vi ` I .-, H: »@;‘=."- -é-rl \. 2 »,1l.‘~ '. ;~.fl“. .- Ifiy- 3 u~.‘:= .' *___* l , .ii . . if)-, ..l. T11, .N1 ‘_ ,,,_»_l.‘ ?‘|,.*.;` at -1 ‘Ji <1 ' .l».?.i.fZ»= f* ‘. 5 ‘i,l , . .il A 11 ‘Ea i1 ~ .' l ‘Iii ,til _l :;,.,~: ". l' ~,. . 5. ,. 1./..~ ii ,-. ?-" lf ‘fifii fi-`?.~*l;ii;§' ‘il |"'ii" 3, PAGE room . me clrmnorrlrrowu GUARDIAN 'AI?.GUST?7»1928 IHE |]HiHl[|iiFiliWN BlliH[I|iN _ THE topsy-tuncydom of British ` P lltl 1 lu ue bette me per yan (in savanna) mailed ln canada una rulml snneus. ul 2° Wh el W3; ver I or " .lu vnu, (rounded lean $5.00 ver year (ln ullvun.-ul celll-emi. “mimi im “ success °n "V Preddont-W. Chester H. ith-Lure. Vlee~Pr\s»ident@I.. li.. Burnett. ~ Liberal Cabinet Minister. Lord Par- UNIVERSAL PEACE. :have been engaged in the illicit traf- moor. on the other hand. as Sir ‘_ ___ ific are a unit against lt, because lt Cimries Aifmd Cripps W" a C°"' TAI.-L the Kwai niiiiims °i the “mid interferes with their profits. Accord- are t0day BSS°0iUi»0d in an in' ing to those who should be in a posi- ternationai Peet. me P“i'P°5e °i tion to know, there were more than which is to make BH end Ui Win* one hundred places in Moncton The pact agreed upon SP€¢iiieS in where liquor was sold more or less minute detail what each nation openly under pr0hlbll_lon__S°me of agrees to do in the event of any one lt smuggled liquor, much of lt vile of them beeominil €mb\'°ii°d With stuff, manufactured locally. Some another or with nn 0ui»Sid€ DHi5i°i\- of these places may remain, but in The gist Of the Bsfeemeni is that many cases the dealers have been war shall not be resorted to until for-ned to close or leave me clly_the and unless every diDi0l¥1B'9i° ¢U°i'i' destination of many of the latter for an amicable settlement has fail- being Nnvn Sn,-,¢1a_ whlnn is under ed. a prohibltory law. In this connec- The nations are in Seri0\1S €BfIl€5i1- tion Halifax papers note the arrest ness about this. They all realize that nf seventeen persons for drunken. war is not Only Costly but a wanton ness over the last week-end, and and unseemly waste of human life this is said to be rather less than BHG DFODSNSY. and that even the the average for some time past." nation which wins the war will hav; lost` more than it has gained, and that a victory in war is but a noi- . low mockery. The Great War, the I blood marks and the wounds oi which are still fresh, and grim evidences of the cost, has taught this 0 lesson. Besides the awful loss in human life there is the rulnous mat- h erial cost. The nations involved in L the recent war are still-ten year; after its close, struggling in poverty' to pay off the cost. Knowing this m _ osltion newspapers claiming that favoritism was being shown, and i I wars in the future may be avoided Zven go ng so ar as to say that the I the nations are very properly de- D vising ways and means by which and 'international disputes settled in ways more conformable to common sense and civilization. cl What are the prospects? Th; W _;_v-Q.->__ POLITICAL PARTIZANSHIP. T is curious to note the length to which political partlzanship will go in occasion. In Nova Scotia the Government is engaged in carrying ut a disease-free proposition among the dairy herds. The procedure has een the customary one of applying hc tuberculin test and destroying the animals which reacted. The attcl' became political. Some op- berculin test was of no value and as often misleading. It was even aimed that some animals which had-reacted to the test were onpost mortcm examination discovered to the late Lord Haldane, a former scrvative M.P., and Attorney-Gener- al to the Prince of Wales. He is a strong Churchman, was formerly Chancellor and Vicar-General of York and Canterbury, and his best known work is “Laws of Church and Clergy." Now he will lead in the Lords for Socialists, Communists, etc., who as a rule, have not much ‘respect in theory for either Aris- toeracy or Church. Lord Thomson has the distinction of being the first peer created at the instance of a Labor Ministry. Rt. Hon. Ramsay Macdonald was in need of support for his ministry ill the Upper House, and after align- ing Lords Haldane and Purmoor, looked for a third to make a quor- um. He could not find him among the existing peers, so he appointed wood Thomson, whose brigade was the first to enter Jerusalem. Secre- tary of State for Air, and asked the King to create for him a peerage, which was done. Prior to the War hc had had a distinguished career as a military professor, and served as the special representative of the War Office on various important missions. He is only fifty-three years of age, is a bachelor, and has the prospect of a long political life before him in the interests of labor. As indicating thc nature of the publicity the visit of the Young Am- bassadors of Empire is giving us ill the Home newspapers, a correspon- dent asks us to publish the follow- ing item: Sackvllle, New Brunswick, Thursday. The first stage of the Young" “Amba.ssadors' ” tour of the Mari- if Lord Parmoor as. Leader of the .. secretary-Lleur. cal. D. A. nruexlnnun, D. s. 0. Labor Party in the House of Lords, - - \ Editor and Manner-J. lt. Burnett. Assassins Editorh-D. K. Currie wlth Lord Thomson as hls nrst lleu_ MONDAY AUGUST 27 1928 tenant. The previous leader was MNOIGS by ~ the -Way '- I at ' iC°NT|NUAT|°N OF i ` -Of all _forms of Chewing Tobacco. the PLUG is the best. ,sri e if ot J Quilts *bu Inmcs W. Bqyjon. M.D. 1, CLIIVIBING STAIRS A friend of mine, a physician, has, established a little habit that mfgntl be worth while for my readers to imitate. He takes a little exercise in the dominal muscles, which keeps his veloping the heart and lungs. Accordingly he tries to get out for a walk every day, and whenever and wherever there are some steps blood for the heart to send down to 5 Do you wonder then that your heart beats fast, and you breathe so. much faster? walking, by propelling the body for- 'C However you can likewise sec that W in adflltlun tu ro ellin n is 33°” ° ` morning. four or live minutes on ab- Of Saw ifimiifir W” “Sed f°l` this stomach and intestines ln excellent Piied in 1912 aPPi”°Xim°i~@iY 750900-' conditlolr 000 board feet of lumber was usedlr However as he has nn olflce pl-nn. in the manufacture of vehicles, in- , me 0nly_ he gets very llttle work cluding autos. in 1923, it was esti- for hls legs' and lt ls the exe,-clsn mated that the auto industry alone for the legs that counts most ln de- consumed well over 1,000,000,000 ft.| lu climb, lf one to three flights, he “vid sf0W'>ié»tS“°h “S P°f°i°{1S °¥’l eggs ya, :.‘;i.°;.:‘.°izi. 2:61.: ‘§“:.l.=f:1z;‘s;’.» tremen,d(l)Jl:lse;.tI:`loI1r(Iil.) oi", worth y(<)Ju ds sfaics “iid Pefhalis Fiofifiil at i1_ii°i . Wm" ”°“ °“‘“l’ “"5” ~ F.f€S§“.§.”'i'Z.?.’.»§§f’ 355.2355 ‘ii.f..°“"$Zi“ Let us- assume that you weigh 150 val] in more industrializcld part? of i pounds If a man' or 125 pounds if a the co ntr The rate for Chico oi "rig-nan' and ggutclinlb tirwenty SWF? is repolitedyto he almost twice thiti is means a ou ave ral e twenty times youly weight, that Sis gi; iéif? °°Uiii1i'€m“S a Wh°iC'» and 3000 2500 d. t h i ht f 5 uri! was 5 more - ~ - Brigadier-General christopher Bird- ,en o‘;'twclvepr‘;‘;’;_ S ° “ eg ° The low me ln European Conn- A d . b ‘ rl ml tries is not the natural result of they weight lw?irt1l'Int\h§rmLI’;lIcs idlflsflle leg; maturity of their civilization, but is; and so far as L-,le actual work done rather due to their inability to ob-, ls concnrnml it mlgl-lt just as well tain sufficient timber at prices theyl rm t ` t ld thi k : if lyiiulnwzicnisikdg Igu Ivsige a olrieiiwt greatly aibove i“?°Schpre¥rai§in§i hunul-eu pound dumbbell nil thslisflnzffiéiiemiéflliniicihveli Ulugh hlélilgrl ground lic a henlgrllnt of nearly 8 hgohlin pr`o'porti`oll to whgt the avcragei ~ ‘ f. t ti ‘ . lxllgryet rlry orl'E,est$gkayoil\¥?|lcrs0ll can spend. In most of the: legs a few seconds to raise that bodyi °_°““i"icS WUT d °9ns“mim°’:i Ilmsl oibyours up the ‘tal/entybii1€P5~ E orfpn!in(2iust;liItlieaT;ros|lEiiit1y§ ow in order get ood down to. _ ~ those legs muscles to do all thatiGerm‘myS per mpiia' °°“s“mi"“i°“. work your heart has to pump hard_lof saw timber increased 30 per ccntl or and raster man normal' anmin the 15 years preceding the war,l your lungs must breathe m0r.c»deep_l while Great _Britain consumed morei ly and faster ln order to purifyl than three times as much per per- lne lngs_ bei'orc . . . . you Can rearllly See than tlmr ginll was cut out, all that was ne- wnrd' ls good for heart and llmgs_ one. Now, 'this is no longer possible, ,U,`l;il‘ Ai Y contracting nations, by way of pre- h caution, have agreed upon a cer- tain measure of disarmament. The; ff have reduced standing armies, they have scrapped obsolete war ships p they have curtailed warship. building; 0 programs. This ls so much to the good. Also they are building new warshlps, submarines and airplanes The United States is buildinga tre- mendous navy, caleulated to` be the greatest in the world. A rev; days ago a test was made on a gig- antic scale as to the vulnerability or unvulnerability of the city of London the heart of the Brltlslr Empire. The test in thc form of n sham attack and a sham defence revealed the fact that thc city of London cannot be defended from an enemy attack from the air. Thousands of bombs containing poison gas can be dropped upon the city within fifteen minutes of thc ave been entirely free from tuber- today with s elvis luncheon. we g _ D p g it f r- ward ymrlll-L lt u Cl ll th extensive forests and large supplies time Provinces was completed hero mundl you are doinléwgftrelgcndoug or lumber in Canada' Siberia’ and WHY GROW TIMBER _ A Work of Necessity In dispensable in Manu- Historlcus - "As increasing numbers of peoples become concentrated in urban in- dustrial centres. and more and more food and other good lumber be shipped to greater distances. the consumption of wood, either as boards or staves, or in the form of Flfer board, for boxes, barrels and ' crates tends to increase. In 1912 more than 5,000,000,000 board feet purpose. According to figures com- lllodcrll lndustry's Demands. Except for regions of exceedinglyl on in 1913 as was used sixty ycarsi Depending on Others. Huetoforc, when one timber re- essary was to move on to a new itllout going outside the United tatcs. It is true that there are ' fa.cturies._ , . '> ulosis. _ It would almost appear as the cattle themselves had taken olltical sides in the matter. Lib- ral cows refusing to respond to the test while Conservative cows arc said to act by the book. Political partizanship is a curious disease and may be expected to lead anywhere. --*<1->-*___ COMPARISONS. MR. H. C. MILNER.. of Nova Sco- tia, well-known in journalistic circles, has recently compiled figures relative to Provincial debts and* comparisons between the neighbor- shall be arriving at Montreal and Ottawa tomorrow. Pl spent at Charlottetown, Prince Ed- 0 This is the reason why football is ayers, boxers, and other athletes whether they will ev" Supply D' °°“` The whole of yesterday was get into nnndmnn by -il-Dad worlbulsidcrable proportion of our (U. S.) which simply means slow running, i` amount nf Wm-ln the tropics of both hcmispheres. It equirements. cxceedingly doubtful, however, 1 v;;++o+¢ro;+eo#»+vo»»»¢]I saw the slim wllite birchcs stand ` mains . D ' ' Q-O-O0 ward Island. The Young "Ambas- sadors" were keeniy interested in on dollars revenue from furs. 0 The Province has no million- o aires, and no poverty. It is further distinguished by the absence of chimney stacks. At the civic dinner, which was attended by Premier Situndcrs. Ruth Newbiggin, of West Kilbride, the Province obtained four milli- E mrmNo i1 r jogging. You can see what it ' pen window can make u f 0 . or a lot f sitting during the day? pire. Timber export to the United --~o+>&_. States is more likely to decrease han to increase. Siberia's forest resources, even if they are as ex- B0 ' - tenslve as has been estimated, can Us M0d6PH Etlquétte me developed only slowly, while her "‘ QQ-§&v l-Z BY Roberta Lee 5 rg as-__ ~/Z M/ ; Tourists Spend $15,000,000 in the Maritimes HEY come to see our country, and quickly learn to chew Big Ben. Big Ben PLUG is the favourite. It fits any pocket; is handy to carry; does not chip or crumble; and the tobacco is always fresh and moist. ' Get Big Ben-the plug that gives you the best chew and the best value for your money. BIG ,EN PLUG Chewing Tobacco Your dealer .sells BIG BEN by the plug and by the Va c u u m (a ir- ' tight) Tin. Like virgins in a lonely land, Through ruthless snows and ally Seiections Who wandered lovely, long ago. mer rains- I FOR Once when the forest stood in And though I play the D0ets Diff. | sllow- I take the pine tree's truth to heart, GURFCIIHD R€2id€i"S iAnd when the spring returned. they And stand On Silent WHi»°i\ Bb0V° rf were The white-birch-thought of thee, Q4-Q-Q-oo-+00-#O-040-oo-Q0* White birches ln the Apr” ah. h my love_ , Thlk hielng totem ------- A“l“-`>i 2°' “mi 0 irlil wu.s W sp r Sardines in Butter-They make a. 1-ULD Bcttcr is n Of days they danced each emera.ld‘nice "hot" sandwich for lunch. THE WISE C " i I nl|l_ ‘Drain 1 box of sardines free from Cmmdays timber consum mm is poor anidilii II/iiric c\Iv1Iig'vIIiinIll- rowing local needs may be expect- d to take a large share of the out- id a lake that mmored deep them yet, any other meat. s . Ayrshire, and John Hackman,` of London, responded for the Young ' “Ambassadors." Governor Hcartz held a brilli- L... seeeooveooeoo-so-Q Q' what is the °°i`i`CCi» Wal’ f0!' American markets. With one excep- put. Whatever surplus there may ing States of the Union and the three Maritime Provinces. The lat- ter. with a population of less than a million, have a combined debt of ant reception and dance in lloner of the party at Government House. A pleasing incident here was when ihe Rev. Bruce Muir, form- erly minister of Glen Village, bridal linens to be marked? tl informal dinners. r ` C A' with the initiaiS Of U10 bl‘id0'S reserves of the timber that comprise maiden name. more than two-thirds of our present, Q. May 8 FOH-st bf! Carved 'dt the consumption. 'I‘he exception isl table at formal dinners? Northern Europe, whose surplus isl A~ N05 11115 may be done 01113’ at all needed by the wood-hungry landing. This fact is now made known to the world. The League eighty millions, or $80 per head. The population of the four nearest states -Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont! Bathgate. entertained Alex. Thom- son, of Bathgate, at his own' house. The two cxchnngcrl rc- gl Q. When two ladies wllo are E lest and hostess are driving, who P . enters the automobile first? Indies, Central Africa, and the Am- be will be so much closer to the pop-l ulous. timber-poor countries cf Asial that very little of it will ever reach on there are only the important ountrles of southern and westernr urope. ` l The Tro ical forests of the East Ab th birches. strongly set WHITE ' BIRCH iThZV;rea(€ dark pine trees guardi Lamb requires mole bastlng than slgtcr-heaven robcd in sleep, Like swarthy bravcs whose love re- ________ A>O of Nations is seriously tackling the, and Connecticut-is 3,234,000, ancli . .l _ ., -_ ,- it -"Ei" 'l lm' V ith ‘ugh f -4 .. i. .,‘, problem. The best thought in the world is with the League of Nations in their laudable object. but th~ above facts remain. Science is moving on, discovering death-dcal- ing gases and missiles of destruction. What are the prospects of univers- al peace? - , P UNREASONABLE. ON the question of liquor sale, tem- perance and prohibition. there has probably been more unreason- able bitterness than on any other that has come before the people. In New Brunswick recently some Temperance organizations passed some very stringent resolutions in criticism of the action of , the gov. R. G. Fulton, chairman of the Liquor Control Board. The Moncton Times, referring to this matter, says in partz- "It seems to many that in the pre- lent state of public opinion it is im- possible to bring about anything like prohibition of the liquor traffic. To many also it seems that the best thing is to control the tramc as for al possible. Mr. Fulton had to do with the enforcement of the prohi- bitory law in Prince Edward Island cane years ago. Apparently hlsex- plrience there was not encouraging Md while some may think that his l to the wisdom of Liquor ‘ their combined debt, $24,742,000 ol" favor are piling up a debt for pos. temy' This is neither pmdeni “or Motherwell crossed the Atlantic to °i"fdii5“bi°~ Cafe Of UUI' i10l‘ii»R80 attend the agricultural conferences. does not appear to enter into the Hon. Charles Stewart and Dr. Cam- calculations of the present genera- 5011- depiii-V minister ‘ii mines' l_l0rr_ we have lnherlted much studied the coal situation in Europe Quint? Shan we mmsmn to pos' ation of low-grade fuels. Hon. Phil- r Liberal friends claim that the Belfast election has been u Justin- N0 doubt when the Prime Minister cation of the Saunders Government mmm” he Wm find °pi’°"““m°s .wepmnce of lrls present posltlon or ns mad porlcy and ns pr°hlbl_ forsending more of his favorite coi- leagues on special ,iaunts to Europe WI In error of Judsment. them is tion pulley. incidentally the people - *thing in it to his discredit, if he h New forced. There are $80 per head' Ii' may be "Med miiiidllcs like io travel abroad nt the me “boi/0 Siiiies With me CXCCDI-i0Il expense of the taxpayers. The Prime of Maine have ouch 9, debt of 1055 Minister himself has just gone to than $5.00 per 11nnd_ whlle Malnc-5 Paris and Geneva to sign his name debt ls appmxlmatery $2000 a head to documents which quite as welland This comparison»with our neighbors is not t‘° 0'" credit' ‘md it is b°` sioner at Paris, Hon. Philippe Roy. Cfimins even more adverse year by|Esrly ln the year Hun. Peter neen- year. Provincial Governments areiall attended the international Labor evidently not looking much into thelwnfefcnce ai' Gcnevil The" Him' future’ but for the sake or m,cScntiJames Malcolm visited Europe to ty * 1-zorronlalt Noras. The next holiday will be Labor DBY. MDDCIHY the third Of Seliiem- visited Europe to deal with financial ber, after which schools will re-open affairs.. Hon. R. Dandurand and ghd bugine” resumed Senators Casgrain and Beicourt are Wonder if the moon had anything to do with the recent good weather. G°°"3° B°“°h‘“`d' MP" is rep” ' or Wu lt just the luck or the Eb senting the govemment at the arts hibition management? Some of our most enthusiastic _ very many peo- wr at the public expense, to what end ave been told that the roads this nnl hlmself knnwll 1; seems the y . 'lim' the* he wr wilt lnbrlnc- seuonbave been the bert tnslfwe height of sbsunlml in appoint nigh- about better conditions. _ r have 'evtr had. and that the Prohi- ly. paid representatives at Illondon. ve people diner in re- bitlon set has been religiously ni- "iii *md Washington to repreryrit our intel-ssls direct, and chenille send ministers and othurvdelegaies minisccnccs of the Homeland. The Mackenzie King Government as efficiently could have been *done by the newly appointed High Commis- make a personal survey of Cunada‘s foreign trade situation. Hon. W. R. and the developments in the utiliz- ippe Roy, high commissioner at Paris, attended the copyright con- ference at Rome, accompanied by Jean Desy, counsellor of external affairs, and finally Hon. James Robb attending the interparliamentary union conference in Berlin. while and handicrafts congress at Prague. So that the Ministers and their friends, “have done themselves proud" thus far as grand tourists. A. Tile guest: R li -<~-~‘o~»._e.__ l 0*-0400-9-O-O By W. L. Gordon gs eve#-4-004 ooo4vvro»-foo W., gr not say "where did you procure the L hook?" Simplicity is preferred. ll “Where did you get thc book?" C ’°° “"*"" ’*°°+*°-¢*¢4 bcr. but mainly to replace our hard- wods ln vllrious lndustrlal _uscs. |N for ellcral construction lu loses it crest and seldom in fairly homo- ?" conlfcr forests which furnish the WORDS OFTEN MIsUsEDf DU building material and pulp wood of zon, will undoubtedly furnisll us, U. SJ with large quantities of tim- llile they contain iilnbel suitable S I l‘l . generally scattered through the :neolls stands comparable to the he nortllem countries. Moreover. he timber needs of the tropical! ountrles themselves are increasing! mackerel. Pronounce mak-er-el, three syllables, not mak-rel. OFTEN MISSPELLED: elite (but pronounced a-lect.) SYNONYMS: ignoblc, vilc, dc- graded, infamous, clisllonorablc. WORD STUDY: “Use a word three times and it is yours.” Let us increase our vocabulary by master- ing one word each day. Today’s word: VINDICTIVE; disposed to revenge. "A vinulctive light came into his eyes." m* ii-‘ii-#_ ~»>0+v¢+o-Q-Q-¢¢v¢¢~..o-yo-¢4.¢g. The Land We Love By Frank Yeigh vo-o-o-o-oovvvoa-+o+¢ »o++o»4 JOSEPH BRANT Q. Who was Joseph Brant? A. Capt. Joseph Brant was in some regards one of the great Indians in Canadian and American history. He steadfastly owed alleg- iance to the British Crown and kept his people, his Six Nations, also true to the cause of the British dur- O F T E N MISWRONOUNCED: r verse. ing the American Revolution des- pite offers from the enemy. He translated the Scriptures into Indian tongue. and on one occasion visited England. - His grave is beside the Old Mohawk Church near Brant- ford and a monument to his mem- ory is in the City of Brantf after whom it was named. trip, confessed that it was with the co-operqtion of the Chancellor of the Exchequer that a settlement of our shipping war claims wal Tench- ed. and siL4oo.ooo llsvuv to t e work for _theg,_...l-Ion. . A. Larkin inr Lend liwlid .l33s__rewlh'ea lilnbplp apidly as the other resources are developed under the stimulus of white settlement. Their accessible forests in most cases are being dc- stroyed as recklessly as our (U.S.) own. The last and probably most in- structive portion of this excellent sketch will appear ere many days and will repay careful perusal. It has many new features. but the most noticeable of all is the comprehen- sive knowledge it displays of what is taking place in outside countries. Others would do well to wake up. also, as Uncle Sam has an eye oil the whole of the trees of the uni- _ Yes We Can . 4 Fill Any' . ~ Prescription and from any Doctor and all our drugs and extracts are the newest and the but that money can buy. When you couple this with our exper- ience and painstaking core In putting up prescription you can pin your faith on Ill. The 2 Macs DRUGSTORE 19 GREAT GEORGE ST. Telephone |16 OIDIBB IIIOIIV ATIINTIUK. \AL Co QP; Fox D . S` /~~» Doe '\__'=;l . O? lu, ~~ -~ -F9. l~._.,~.;` ._ . . . .\,.fls .'”“`:` 3', ' ‘ ' ' 3 1/,"`lll_` , i fi ll\lr»Erl|/il. ,id w' il_' ‘ ' ' ` .._"l, .Q QI/illclall .yéfi 1 Successful Fox Feeding , Is the problem of our Fox Ranchcrs today. How t0 grow strong, vigorous foxes, that will produce pelts Of fine texture and lustrous sheen, is uppermost ln all minds. THE IMPERIAL BISCUIT COMPANY, LIM- ITED, haveifound the solution in their increasingly popular IMPERIAL COD LIVER OIL FOX BISCUITS and ' IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD "‘-".-.._. ll r . 4' 1 :gf 1'-_ 5 Regular feeding of these is giving the desired results in our Prince Edward Island ranches. “Imperial- fed Foxes” are in a class by themselves. They “produce the goods.” Ensure success by liberal feeding 0f “IMPERIALS.” ' For sale by leading Island dealers or direct- from factory. /. . Imperial Biscuit Go., limited Charlottetown, P. E. I. l 1 ' Exclusive Distributors for Maritime Provinces for _ Houck-Fire Guns." " " Wi- -.Jr-r/_ _‘ . "