.,_-,,.-»¢-.->»-zup¢ ~ - PAGE FOUR THE IPHARLUTTETUWN GUARDIAN l‘r::iiile11L—\V. Cheater S. Ale-Lure bl. l’. Secreiury-Lleun-Col. D. A. llacKlunon, D. S. U l-ldiior and Managing Director-J. ii. Burnett Associate [Editors-Frank Walker and D. K. Currie ilnrning lluily (founded 1581) 85.00 per year (ln advance) delivered. 411.50 per yi-nr (lu nilvunec) mailed in Canada and United Staten. \II\'ICIKTISING REPRESENTATIVES -'1‘u» iicckivllh Special Agency Inc. New York Central ‘it_v_ iii-nc-rnl Motors liuililing_ Detrolp interstate Build- ‘irnst l'l\'i'l'l‘ll S'i‘.\'l .. w Yuri; l s Ci , Willnughby ‘Power Building, Chicago: Syndicate Building, st. 1 11s; u nn iiuiiiiinzuiiinnin; liouudnoek Building, San Frnnetu-n; 111:; s1», can. Sin-en Philadelphia . Morning Maxim _ ‘ The mun u hu ls never idle has no time to be mean. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1982 Vice-l'roaldeut—l. ii. Burnett notes av n11: 1m This Dominion lmv immensely. in stature, says an exchange, when, in 1911, »it rejected the Washingw Reciprocity 'I‘reaty. It loomed still larser on the American horizon when it entered into the war near- ly three years ahead of the United States. During the last three years it has gained still farther in the respect of Americans generally be- cause the" Bennett Government had the courage to slop the flood- . VPROPERLY REJECTED if _L__ article was based on an archaeol- T‘ The rejection of the Libcral|081¢i11 i711$¢°V9W 01' l1 511911 $11119 amendment opposing the Anglo- laBi-‘h W116" Sewrill Inf-Tin r9110‘! Were Canadian trade agreement, as re- ‘1911115 0X1 $111? 5111111116 01 551919 H111 ported in yesterday's dcspatchcs, In?!" Lflriorilifi. Qllebeu- THESE R1113 was ‘practically u foregone conclu- 991151-5194 01 501119 175811199“ 01 9°5- sion. The amendment was ruled Yery- 111*? b01111 0f i1 611111111". 811d 9- out by the Speaker on the ground 51°11? 9111591- that it was improperly worded, T119 5W0"??? 1135 9X°119d 45911515‘ some parts being in agreement with ‘@1351? 111161951- T119 116518115 W111¢11 portions of the treaty, while in are ‘11511115111511111919 011 i118 11091-91’! others it ivas merely an expression fragments were made- 11" 15 111M131“- of general principles, As it 1s an with the aid of flshbones, feather open secret that the Liberal mem-fluins- 311d mstrulnems °1_ 51M"? bcrs were not unanimously in favor which 111° Indmns manumcwred of the amendment, it is more than .191‘ 1he1nse1ve5- AI1111T°P°1°€1¢B1 1'9‘ probable the mum, phraseojogylsearch has disclosed the fact that was iuloptcd to avoid having the 31ml" 70° Yen's 53° “11,I"°q“°:5 issue come to u vote in the House. "111339 of 591119 51“ exmed 1n the Mr. King “'11s thus enabled to make "Emmy of 13119131”- an innocuous gesture of opposition, Om‘ 911°“ °1 1111-‘ dmiwefy- without embarrassing his party fol- ‘110165 the mnn-tpeg Pr” Press» has lowers who were opposed to his nt- been to recall to mind a fresh real- titudc in caucus. The fact that the rim?“ oycanadws youth’ In 1232' Liberal “MM did not himself the inhabitants of the northern part move the amendment. but merely o’ w” oontinem were primitive submitted it to the Speaker for his peoples’ relying on the Chase for a livelihood, continually at war with neighboring tribes and gracing their lives with but very rudimentary art. Comemporaneous Ehiwpe had ivy »thal-, time seen three important cru- sades to the Holy Land, crusades conducted in a pageantry that was founded on a high knowledge o! metal-work in weapons and armor, of weaving in vestments and ban- ners, ‘of Ieather-waftsmanship in saddlery. No knowledge comparable was to be found at that time in what is now Canada. It was not until more than three hundred winters’ snows had blown over the slopes of Sable Hill that the aborigines of Canada came ln contact with Europeans in the per- sons of Jacques Cartier and his sailors. S0 that this country, speak- ing in terms of archaeology, is hard- ly more than four hundred years old-the period in which the white man invaded it and over-ran it. Europe, in such terms, dates back to pro-Roman days, when the sturdy ancestors of the modern Europeans gleaned a spare livelihood from the river-valleys. Canada, for a young nation, com- pares well with the older ones of Enirope-and she is a! yet 0H1? 111 the lusty vigor of youth. ruling, indzcutcs that it was not intended to be taken seriously. The potty nature of the Opposi- tion leader's criticism of the Con- I fcrcrice agreement was a surprise even l0 those rvho entertained no great opinion of his ability as a statesman. A case in point was his pomment. onthe fact that the agree- ment will he in force for five years. His own trade agreement with ‘the West Indies was for a. per- ‘tod of twelve years. Five years 1's surely not an undue length of time in which to insure stability {of trade negotiations. According to a London ciespzitch in the Southam newspapers, it is confidently pre- dicted that. as n result of the new- found interest in the Canadian market the Dominion will be visit- ed within the next few months by {large numbers of heads of British concerns: and the chief factor in bestlrrmg British industrialists to go after the Canadian market ll expected to be the stability of tar- iff arrangements assured by the iivc jvcars’ agreements. Hitherto, 1hr dcspatcit notes, there has been little inclination to invest the con- sidc-rable sums necessary to explore and open up avenues of trade, with the constant threat that new tariffs might destroy all chances of busi- ness. Manufacturers and groups within allied industries have been hesitant to 11121111: ltcnYy WINTER MAIL SERVICE commit- Emphasis on the advantage of hav- mcnts for co-opcrzuive marketing 111E the B11‘ H1511 5911409 W‘°-‘11i11111511' or storage il.,1_1<.::; in Canada for the 8d before the winter sets in 15 P1311‘ same TPékiUil. With lhcsi- handicaps ccl by Mr. W. K. S. 381111111118 1n i1 rcmoyccl, bath uxouvy‘ and cnthus- ,rccent letter in“ The Guardian. Mr. 1:11.111 will 11c forzhcomine. ‘Htfimming points out that applica- It is that Mrftion for ths service should be made King was not aware of the facts'to the proper authorities in suflicient above stntcd by British manufac- time to have it go into effect when turcrs. What then was his purpose the trip; of the S. S. Hochelaga in opposing the five years period are discontinued, and that to our in the agreement? He claims to be 19°91 merchams m9 mam" 15 one ‘of considerable importance. Airmail service in other years has undoubt- edly been a much appreciated con- venience, and Mr. Hamming sug- gests that the cost of re-establish- lng it would be comparatively small. Necessary economies have resulted in a. curtailment of such services throughout Canada, but special which British industrialists rc- Claims based on me winter disad- gard m, m‘, hum Important pa“ vantages of this Provnce might be of the agreement. The whole at- mud m applying for the re-estab. mude of My King has been on Hlishmcnt of the service here. The par with his irresponsible and in- readiness which the Postal Depart- consistcnt stntirmcnts in this con- mam has Show“ in me past m meet- 1i11g the requirements 0f mail trans- portation to and from the main- land is a guarantee that every reas- onable request will be given the fullest consideration. inconceivable desirous of seeing every opportun- lty given of extending British trade 1n (fnundn in return for the pre- fcrcncvs granted in the British hturkr-t to our own producers. He run-n (illlfllS the British manufac- I iurcrs huvc been unduly discrimin- ntctl zuzninst. Yet he goes out of his wny to criticise the provision nection, and it is not surprising that there been dissention among his own followers and parzy press us to the wisdom of the course he has pursued. has 700 YEARS AGO 1A recent. number of Le Naiion- Yesterday was the 127th anni- nl sic et 1c Dcvcir (which is the versafy of the battle of Trafalgar. weekly ed.tion of Le Devor, a Mcn- No subsequent engagements by treal daily newspaper) carried a land or sea have dimmed the fame highly interesting article entitled of Nelson's victory on that occa- "Iho Indian Village of the Thlt- I10!!- EDI TORI AL NOTES ieenth Century at Lanoraie." This [culture is diture on accommodation for con-lt- centre of the City and readily ac- lsh is spoken by 180,000,000 and a understood by 00,000,000 or more who do not look upon it as their native tongue. German ls spoken by ing of this country with dumped American goods, to the injury of our work people; because our bank- ing sysiem has stood three years cf depression very admirably as compared with the American bank- ing system, and because our Gov- ernment has successfully taken the lead in the establishment of an Imperial trade palicywhich pre- fers Empire goods to American and other foreign goods. The question now is not what De Valera will do, but what he did. I-Ie made it impossible for McNeil! to hold office. He and his Cabinet in- sulted McNeill on all occasions. The titular head of the State was not even invited to official func- tions, and De Valerifs apologies were obvious evasions that were n0 apologies at all. Russia has just concluded trade agreements with Japan and with France ivhich indicate her im r- tance as a factor in international affairs: the agreement with Japan may well mean something much more far-reaching than a commer- cial deal, and may presently be seen to be part of a new diplomatic line-up in the Far East which unites Russia and Japan in a policy cf mutual interest which may have important consequences for the West/em nations which also have interests in Eastem Asia. Mr. Lloyd George, addressing l great peace meeting in London, calls on the world to follow Ger- many's example and disarm. Hon- or demands, he says, that the na- tions carry out their pledged word as contained in the ‘Treaty of Ver- sailles. Unless this is clone, he fears that there is a danger of the world unwittingly being plunged into war just as it was in 1914. l-Ie is con- vinced, also, that no ruler in Eu- rope desired war in 1914. The Li- beral statcsmaifs references to the attitude of European rulers in 1914 is certain to recall that famous British election right alter the con- flict when, ifwe remember aright. the Lloyd George cry was "H8118 the Kaiser!” Time woks 819111 changes. Their kindly Majestles of Ell!- land, {he King and Queen, never performed a more gracious act than when they received informally I-le- len Keller, the marvellous defll. dumb and blind American woman. who has surrounded her terrible handicaps in such a wonderful manner. And their kindness was well repaid for after oonverslns with Miss Keller they marvelled at her attainments just. as have all who have had the meeting her. was very sarcastic about democra cy as it is practised "in this eoun try," but he W88 he was. By some the growing 1118911"! between the number of people H1- gaged in agricultural pursuits i" Canada and those otheiwlse em- played is cited as evidence that there is something wrong with our fiscal system. Butsimllar oompim‘ sons in other countries give like re- suit, The National Industrial Board of United BIBtGShB-t 15511151111511"? ment based on the census returns showing that of the major gmurifl oi’ those gainfully employed, agri- the only one that has shown n. constant d°W11Wflri1 11111115 since 1870 in the ratio of person-B employed to population. London is linked with over JINY United Kingdom ports by regular steamship services; others are serv- ed as traffic offers. Coastal service vessels which used the Port of Lon- don last year 1188141853911 151110-539 net register tons. The Port of Lon- don Authority have from time to time incurred considerable experi- ing vessels, notably at the London and St. Katharine Docks, which axe adjacent to the commercial cesslble from all parts of London. The New York World lays: Enr, 90,000,000 and is understood and v.1 w. Barton. MD. TWD KINDS OF COUGH a number of ailments. Just as a headache may be due to any one of a number of causes, so also a cough may be a symptom of Lord _Byng’s Baton (Exchange) The promotion of Viscount Byng of Vlmy to be Held Marshal of the T“ Now“! Wm” British Army is a well earned hon- " ' __ or to a great soldier and a great 11mm‘ Mflwlm‘ mu‘ I man. As is well known, modern custom has made the Field Mar- shal's baton an emblem of recogni- tion of nut mat ‘services rather than a token of selection for posi- tions of future responsibility in active military command. Like the Order of Merit, the circle o! Field From his far wlgwam sprang the strong North Wind And rushed with war-cry down tho _ steep ravines, And wrestled with the giants of the woods; And with his ice-club beat the Vis I Mr. . iocronen zz, 193,- - King ’s Objections (Montreal Gazette) Even those who foresaw that Mr. William Lyon Mackenzie King would have difficulty in finding arguments against the con. fcrcnce “resolutions, even they can hardly have been prepared for the remarkable line of opposition which the Liberal leader has adopted. Mr. King is not a. novice in the diflicult art of making bricks without straw, but he has had more than ordinary difliculty in his effort to build a case against the work of the conference. He is determined to attack the resolutions, but upon what ground can this be done P He finds himself in the somewhat presumptuous swelling crests As you know you cough because it seems to ease you or give some relief. If you try you may often prevent a cough showing that to some extent, or in some cases at least, coughing is under the con- trol of the will. Although the majority of coughs are due to some irritation of the lining or mucous membrane of the throat there are coughs due to ir- ritation of the pleura or covering of the lung, to irritation of the canal leading to outer ear, to irritation of the aorta or large vessel into which the heart pumps the blood to be distributed all over the body, and also other causes. death; whirling leaves banks; hardened earth, the plains, sudden paused ning streams, the things Of the deep watercourses into And with his Chill mi, froze the 0i’ dun and gold and fine in icy- And smote the tall reeds to the And sent his whistling arrows o'er Scattering the lingering herds; and When he had froaen all the run- And hunted with his war-cry all That breathed about the woods, or Marshals is regldly limited. inevitable, leased by lord Plumerts death. ' of to victory. | British process through perils exception to the general rule ‘count Byng was the logical, almost heir to the baton re- To the hundreds of thousands of Canadians who did their bit t0 make the Canadian Corps what it was, the name of Byng will always typify all that was best in the tra- ditions of British generalshlp. All down through history doggedneas o! the rank and file and ineptitude of the higher command have been lexpectcd familiar features in the 1 muddling The blunders of the Great War were no of Now as the cough is due to some irritation it would seem the right thing to permit the cough to rid Bare prairies roamed the bleak, | swelling to the mournful sky. history. But in the Great War, as in previous conflicts, the British Empire did produce some leaders fit tocommand the men they led. position of having to condemn the considered judgment of the Empire's ablest statesmen and to reject the fruit of that judgment, It is of no consequence to him that the work of the conference has beemacclziimed in every part of the Empire as establishing a ne\v principle which is to dominatcliereafter in all commercial and economic relations among the several Empire units. He goes so far, indeed, as to say that while the agreement with Canada has been approved by the National Government in Britain, “the Brit. ish people have not agreed to it." As a. matter of convenience he forgets that the National Government received from the British people a clear mandate to revise the old free trade system, even to reverse it, and that a. protective tarifl‘, to be modified in its appli- cation within the Empire by means of reciprocal preferences, was definitely included in this mandate. If Mr. King now pins his hope upon the inconsistent behavior of Sir Herbert Samuel, Lord Snow. den, and his little company of Liberal dissenters, or if he thinks that the 1111817 5901411155 0f the Manchester Guardian are the voice of British public opinion, he is imagining a vain thing, as an excuse for a vainefiort. The whole attitude of the Liberal leader bespeaks the wounded _ pride of an unsuccessful politician in the presence of an important _ cause loss of sleep, and interfere the part of the irritation just as a sneeze gets rid of an irritation in the nose, and a diarrhoea gets rid of some offending matter in the large intestine. Coughs are divided into two class- es, those that are trying to rid the throat and chest of some mucous obstruction by expectornting (spit- ting) and those that are just irrit- ating and have no useful purpose. Thus, as Dr. Stuart Pritchard, Battle Creek, points out, the expec- torant cough has a. purpose and should be aided. The irritant cough serves no good purpose and should be stopped or suppressed. “Both types of cough have their characteristic sounds, and both may occur in the same patient. The sounds of an expectorant cough are always linked together, and once begun this cough ca». be checked only with difficulty until it ends with the usual characteristic sound of the expectoration coming up from the lower part of the throat. The sounds of an irritant cough on the other hand are independent and may be likened to separate blows of a hammer. “The irritant cough not only fails to serve any useful purpose but if unchecked may be dangerous. The ill effects of unchecked severe irritant coughing may cause complications in early stages of influenza, spread infection to the pleural coverings of the lungs in Pneumonia, aggravate pain, free trade being given away. with the heart's action. seem 51m enchanwd’ The thought then is that with any severe cough the family phy- sician should be consulted so that; the cough may be aided or stopped according to its cause. Lloyd George And The Liberals (Montreal Gazette) A few weeks ago Lloyd George, —Isabella Valancy Crawford. armament proposals wh‘ch, in his judgment, "brought Europe to the verge of the gravest international crisis since 1914." In condemning the acquiescence of these Liberals in the hoisting of various measure for social and agricultural amelior- ation, he strikes a familiar note, and strongly suggests that the rejection of the provisions of “The Sixpenny Pamphlet" has left a. rankling sore in the mind of its author, and he does not hesitate to foiat upon these erstwhile colleagues the disastrous consequences o! the dissolution of the Liberal party which resulted in Such is the gist of the communi- cation. It is disappointing to the dissentients who may have enter- tained some hope that the Welsh leader would welcome their return to the Liberal fold, and. approve their attitude in making a breach in the National Goveurment. They are roundly scolded for what Lloyd George considers a series of colos- sal blunders on their part, and the only crumb of comfort they can extract from the mlssive is contam- ed in the statement that should the Liberal Federation make a fresh start, provided the former Liberal ministers are wllirig to erase sundry "criminal gtupiditias" by which they they can count upon his whole-hearted sup- port. Put in plain mglish. this means that Lloyd George is confid- ent that he holds the golden key to the fortunes of the Liberal party, and that the mountains must come ' to Mahomet. Whether th‘: is the valiant stand of a resolute freeman or simply the adrolt gesticulation of an opportunist who measures his length in a. grotesque mirror, intel- ligent onlookers wlli be able to judge. greater than Byng of Vimy. tempered and force. There was, petence in high places-of only the Channel Under the wrong commander tween May, 1918, force. As if by instinct Byng seemed to know clpllne was but help win the war. tans of the fut in November, Italy of the forces which were have followed up the was planned as a major was finally carried out as a And among these leaders none was General Byng assumed command of the Canadians at the most cru- cial period in their military his- tory. In May, 1918, the Canadian Corps was by no means a finely hardened fighting or course, the great tradition of natural heroism. dating from the epic stand by the Firs; Canadian 'Divl.sion at Ypres in April, 1915. But there were oth- er ‘traditions-of sordid political in- terference, selfishness and incom- V wire- pulling and intrigue crossing not but the ocean. the history of the Canadian Corps be- and May, 191'1, might have been an altogether d11- ferent and altogether uninspiring record. As it was, the man who was then Sir Julian Byng showed posi- tive genius in welding diverse Cana- dian elements into uniformly strong and effectively disciplined ftghtini; General that the much exaggerated Canadian scorn for the triviallties of military dis- superficiai, and that Canadians would respond to leadership which took for granted their determination and fitness t0 Great as was the importance of the capture of Vlmy Ridge, histor- e may decide that Viscount Byngb final claim to mi- litary greatness was in the lesson he taught by the Cambrai attack 1917. As is well known, the collapse of the Italian Army upset the plans for that at- tack and caused the despatch is intended break through at Cambrai. What attack mere privilege of A speaker in Toronto last week an American talking to a. convention that was largely American and perhaps he just forgot for the moment W119" responding to the ceremony o1 be- ing made freeman of some Welsh citadel, declared that he had ever been a freeman in the realm of pol- ' ltics. He averred that he had never - truckled to party amliatlons and that during his career he had suf- fered from all sorts of adverse criticism simply because he prefer- red principles before party strategy and had thus ever striven to advo- cate and uphold national ideals, even though it meant a break-away from associates he held in respect. ‘Ibis is a rather refreshing sort oi’ 11110101111. cominB as it does from a aatesman who is credited with be- ing, the most astute opportunist of the time. i-Ie is always capable of springing a new surprise, which itself may account for the opnicn held in some quarters that the Welsh Liberal veteran is still a factor to be reckoned with, albeit his politi- cal iortunes have been so reduced that the "faithful few" upon whom he can count are members of his own family. The latest barbed ar- row let fly from his twangdng bow is a- communique addressed to the Natbnal Liberal Federation, in re- spouse to an invitation extended Lloyd George t0 attend a meetinB at Queen's Hall, lnndon. at which it was asked that he should express approval of the action of Sir Her- bert Samuel and su- Archibald Sin- clair, with some other free traders, in resigning from the National Government. Flatly d'd Lloyd George turn down the invitation, and in acrld terms proceeded to criticize the posture of these insurgents respecting their support oi’ the Government's pro- gram, not alone upon tariffs, but al- so upon wheat quotas and the dia- atood by 75,000,000 more. ‘There are hundreds of’ other languages and used by 20,000,000 more. French is smken by ‘LWOMIQ and IJQQU" 011M U10“- I . dialects, but none o1 them approa- i cigars." of them last week." them to him again is where the real feat of a. salesman is going to come in." Empioyer-"I want you to prove demonstration. But Byng did d0 achievement calculated to enhance the prestige of his opponents. For a Conservative Government to succeed where his own could not is unforgivable ,and it matters not at all that the progress and future strength of the Empire are dependent in large measure upon the proposals which he condemns. Fortunately, in this instance, partisanship is impotent. Mr. King knows that his opposition can be of no avail; perhaps that knowledge gives him a sense of greater freedom. Some of his contentions suggest this, including his strikingly inaccurate reference to British opinion, and including also his vehement protests against tariff commitments which bind the Dominion of Canada and the United Kingdom for a period of years. His solicitude for the taxpayers of Britain is impressive but for the fact that these same taxpayers subscribed so whole- heartedly to the mandate which the National Government is carry- ing out, through the con ference agreements and otherwise. It is, of course, as clear to l\Ir. King as to anyone else that the reciprocal preferences agreed upon at Ottawa would be unworkable unless guaranteed for a period of years. Neither party to such a contract could afford so wholesale a redistribution of trade if the change were to be of uncertain duration. There must be a definite trial period, long enough to produce results upon which the advantages of the new movement can be measured with accuracy. In these cir- cumstances something in the nature of a treaty is necessary, and the governments concerned have had recourse to a five-year agree- ment, Even the example set by Mr. de Valera, in Ireland, in regard to the annuities, scarcely provides Mr. King with ground for dis- puting the propriety of this compact, and unless Mr, King, given an opportunity, patterns his conduct upon that of the Irish Free State President, the contract will stand. And, Canada, by the way does not “ fetter the fiscal liberty and freedom of the people of the Old Land " ; the people ‘of the Old Land themselves, who are quite capable of managing their own affairs, have made the agreement which Mr. King, in a nobly altruistic regard for their welfare, declares to be indefensible. Another peculiar complaint is that the tarifl‘ has been raised against other countries and that a. barrier has been erected against the extension of Canada's foreign trade. As to this last, it may be recalled that a similar objection was registered against the original preference and was answered effectively at the time by Hon. W. S. Fielding, who made the first preference a. part of the Canadian tariff law. Mr. King does seem to remember that a Liberal Min- istry inaugurated the British preference, but when a Conservative Government, in giving further effect to this old Liberal policy, increases duties against some foreign countries, he is heard object- ing; and very fine indeed is the distinction between a preference provided through one kind of tariff change and a preference provided through another kind. So far as the foreign exporter i! concerned, it is the difference between the general tariff and the preferential which matters, and he is not much concernd with the manner in which that difference is created. Mr. King's real trouble is that he cannot stomach a tariff increase whether it is designed to serve the interests of the Empire or not. what for three years all the Gen- erals on both sides of the line had said couldn't be done-he staged a surprise attack which broke clean through the entire trench system. A counter attack soon drove back the adventurers. But the lesson was learned. Immediately foliowlns i116 winter the war of moveme .t was resumed. First came Ludendorfs last desperate drives. ‘Then came the great allied nut-cracker move- ments. Byrig at least made war a little less hellish than a mere man- killlng contest, where generalshlp your power as a salesman. Just sell that gentleman some of those c Salesrnan-"But I sold him some Employer-“I know, but selling h llr. ffrench’: tive casualties an the adding ina- themselves; Marshal, lord Byngb was the real key to competence. By his simplicity of life and total lack of affectation Lord Byng made life‘ long admirers or twice. Hard-bitten Canadians. inveterably hostile to red tabs and brass hats, wok one look at lord Byng and decided to "1116" Boas a real man." In wartime dew that almost mystic ability to win confidence and respect was of great import- ance in the outcome of -the war. m peacetime, "during the sojourn of Lord and Lady Byng at Ottawa, it. was this same characteristic which won for the then Governor-Gener- al what mlght almost be described as a nation-wide bond of affection. a little nearer to the heart than ever existed before. hine. In the man who is now Field character of men who may ave met him face to face but once keen-eyed was confined to figuring compara- llennicide Capsules Give Best Results Don't overlook the fact that your foxes need good atten- Try . Brahmin Orange Pekoe Tea Retail price 50c per lb. ' Sold Oil-l! lll BM] Lllllllll PIGIIII- Hair Restorer vv-V“ tion ll you are to derive good returns for your Investment. 0 One thing of utmoat lm- i; A Daimler: ' r pre- pol-lance u to nee that "they aeration which mwru. are free from worms. 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