rlv n ‘.0 QIFD can n. Ionian n -¢v-\s-»vu-onn-_.-~ Q STRONG INDICTMENT . “y?” 1g; own way and damn the I .11.... and there the Prime Min- i uiugtqry phrases, but regarded in v g qqnniu indictment, much strong- =i min tone than the resolution of ohgiwbeague of Nations. It reveals II . sax-cans}. 5» rugrssruve yarns l m‘ - ‘ —-——i— ' ‘i N details of the Tart; flipped by ms Majesty the Kin; m: the trying years oi the Great Wari are given in a series or articles now‘; mnnlhgin the London Spectator asi a lpecialulubllee feature. The su-i unlit llr. l. Y. Benson recalls the‘ attitude of His Mandy's arsed- nntber, Queen Victoria of beloved memo , after the Black Week in, December, 1899, when three malof disasters occurred 1n South Africa, As the aged Queen sat knitting soldiers’ scarves close he»; side-her green-shaded lamp, one of; herlfmlsters who had come down‘ tojifiirdsor permitted himself some pessimistic remark. To that she rc- pLiedflWe are not interested in the possibilities cf defeat. They do not oiuqtlff And she went on with her knitting! ItP-was in much the same spirit. writes Mr. Benson, that Kin! 59°11‘! shouldered and carried the burden ,1 gqygmlgnty during the four years of the Great War. He hid hid Y"? militury training, and indeed in his visits to France, eager though lie w...‘ yglosm all that his Generals could tell him, it was to see and be m“ by his troops that perhaps mos’. concerned him. “Over there t.o the East, whence came that sullen ll!- ceasanoe of firing, were the Ger- man lines, and behind them was his cousin William, clad in a variety of . uniforms lecturing to Hindmburl; and; Ludendorfl on strategy. Ho made‘ sudden surprise visits to dine g]; 'Me5s, and on news of his ar- rival the bottles of French cham- pagne “were denuded of their labels and labels of German chfllhPflllle wore hastily affixed, and the War Lord smacked his lips and defivd hlgofficers to produce a finer wine. which. oi course, they were unlblfl toxic, ror it. was the best they could procui-e. He had become a balloon filled with the heady gas of ceasc~ teas adulation and was soon to burst- But away to the West a-flilioi-lwk- in; motor-car plied the roads and oqmctlmes it stopped when it over- adetachment en route for the tmand out of it stepped his cou- George and shook hands with officer ha command; lhd "id a word or two to the men, and wish- oddthem a sole WW1“? , Practically every returned soldl" who will participate in Monday's jubilee celebrations has some P9P‘ hi... recollection of His MaJBfiiY in ‘ugQ-guch s. quiet, unassumini ‘Pie ggj-jlr,’ Benson describes. There las neyer any fuss or ballyhw 15°“ ‘he lwyal visits in the Front, but the so"... upon the troops was lmdvubt" gdiy one of the great factors in mgiritaining the spirit necessary i0 m; gu-rylng on of that tremendous eonilict.. "sir-rm, master Ramsey. Mec- Donald in-his attack on Germany» published in London last week-end. used language which thirty 0r 101W yeiarssgo would only hi" Bcwm" 5n ultimatum or a formI-l declaration of war, says the Ottawa Journal. Although the articin ap- "in an eirclusively circulated poll Jal organ, it was stated by Prijire ..Minister MacDonald that the Government stands behind ib- Itseervls also that his conelusi r are shared by the bulk otthe Na- tional GovernmlnnVs followinll in Parliament. Mr. MacDonald states frankly that he has had “If!” doubts” of Connolly's intentions svgl-‘jclnco Berlin quit the mauve of fistions, and that ovcntssince have shown that the Fnith proposes uencds." in temperate. con- Wwentircty his article amounts to 1-1" saline adopted by the council of flwrqal iuealure of the change in gigsttitude of the one-time peace- WCflJ-Drlce champion. Trc mo: Quasi thing about it is that ' is“; a vague shadow of his n, stmdthstthepeaocpolicy n-orost B-itain must be based on ‘ “ fcuwlth the Reich. He ‘bolt the coor- 1llinst Ger- ‘hc jilt leszrs it on the with‘ the‘ intonation that if . I'm" mutter tin home l inclined nations [it | -" 4 ' » QITEIWII _ I. , ' . Ibo-I . D A 00-6 Its- vill Idioe . / . . 1.5 _ resin». Ipllanl. I In oldlll MAY l. 1935 groping for a continental niche, has at last come to rest with them. Ap- pearing simultaneously with reports ihat Germany is laying down sub- uiarlnes, thus smashing the last surviving military clause of the Versailles Treaty, it is designed to arouse British opinion in favor of still further bolstering air and naval defences. Fiviliy, its publication at a time when the Prime Ministers of the Dominion; are gathering in London for the King's Jubilee and the thoughts and sentiments of British people are being tuned to an Im- mzlial pitch, suggests that Mr. Mac- Donald is taking advantage of the occasion to arouse the Empire as a whole to the need of concerted action. i EDITORIAL NOTES All set for ER: thanksgiving tomorrow and Monday. Germany is now boasting of her success in deceiving the League of Nations. Still there are people who have more faith in another nation than in their own. The key-note of tomorrows church services will be “Give peace in our time, 0 10rd!" Monday's holiday and celebrations should be red letter days here and. throughout the Empire. The threstenings from without are drawing us all closer together. and making us realize how bountifuliy blessed we are in the enjoyment of a constitutional monarchy whereby orderly rule and administration in- sure the freedom of the individual and the well-being of the whole. In recent times there have been some clever people who laughed to scorn the old copy book maxims that they wrote in school, consid- ering them out-of-date and imprac- ticable. But they Eif} now beginning to realize the wisdom of laying to heart in the days of their youth such truisms as "Trust in God and keep your powder dry“; “a disarmed peace is weak"; “peace begins when: ambition ends"; “if you wish for peace prepare for war"; “the peace ‘of nations cannot be secured without azms, nor arms without pay. nor pay without taxes." Probably the only Canadian lay- man ever to speak in Westminster Abbey was Hon. P. C. Larkiri, for- mer Canadian High Commissioner to mndon. Before a great congre- gation 12 years ago he asked the Dean and Chapter to accept the Canadian colors to hang perman- ently over Wolfe's monument in re- membrance oi the many colors oi Canadian battalions deposited there while the battalions were fighting in France during the Great War. Visiting Canadian clergyman, how- ever, frequently have been invited to occupy the pulplts at the Abbey and St. Paul's Cathedral. What is the new religion Ger- mans have substituted for Chris- tianity? Here are the essentials as given by its author, Ludcndorff: "l-Germans are the greatest. strongest, most war-like people on earth. ' “2—Thcy have two great enemies -Christianity and ‘secret supernat- ural DOW8fS'-——F'l‘i30l'lll!50i'll‘y, Jesuits, and International Jewery. "'3-~T'1lB whole meaning and force of a nation are concentrated in its army. "k-Christianlty divides the peo- ple at home and restrains the fury of the soldier at the front. ‘mere- fore, Christianity Is Germany! greatest enemy, and must be root- ed out if the nation is to fulfil its great mission." In sn interview in a recent issue, our evening contemporary tried to show that Mr. Mich Hepburn! pol- icy had the approval oi all except the "idle rich" and such like. Mr. Hepburn’; financial policy has a far more general effect than that, how- ever, as indicated by the Perth Ilx- posltor. Referring to a meeting of the Delrnnture Committee of Lan- u-k County Council the lrpositor published the foliofing resolution adopted by that body: "Resolved that the Debsnture Committee of the ‘Ocuhty Council of Lanark Council wish to draw to the atten- tion of the Provincial Premier firs very detrimental affect cnthe sale of county Bonds brought about by the nrcvmd nwdietica c! Gov- lrflment contractual obligation sosuuliroct his attention to the our; dihlzuit pclltion- fa which musk Notes I Jolul Simon to Berlin is reported to have been a failure. Germany, it appears, knows definitely what she want-s. intends to get it ,and‘ not be sidetracked by what they “multilawra? treaties, in which for peace and security. “In other Words Gennany. particularly with Soviet Russia, refuses to enter any concord oi notions-St. Catherines Standard. - \ Dr. M. T. MlcEachrrn. associate director of the American College of Surgeons. reports that 26,000 "rive- year"-concer cures" are on, record in the reports of his institution, By five-year cures he means cases in which the patient has been treated for cancer at least five years ago and has subsequently remained healthy without recurrence of that disease. He holds strongly to the view that cancer is curable if caught early enough and promptly treated. Hitler is hailed as the saviour of the people. "He has broken the chains of Versailles" they cry ecstatically. But it may be that he, too, was close pressed; the economic salvation he prom- Laed Germany was not materialis- ing. Distralcting attention from home conditions by the promise of large adventures abroad is an old way_ with dictators. Hitler may have good reason for so dramatically revealing his hand. Whatever the reason, there can be no doubt of this: Europe can no er pretend. Peace cannot be made merely by shouting it. We must begin again‘ to build- this time with more certainty, for we know pretty plainly where we stand-London Sunday Rcfree. The Germans are hopeless quibb- lers. They withdraw from the dis- armament conference, they notify intended withdrawal from the League, they ignore a treaty and in- crease their forces; and then, in reply to Mr. Ramsay MacDonald's assertion that they are threatening peace and breaking up the road leading in that direction, they have the impudence to point out that Germany has never withdrawn "her offer to submit to every limitation of armaments to which other coun- tries are ready to submit." They are disappointed they say. that Mr. MacDonald “still expresses doubts of Germany's will to peace." Former Mayor Louis Dfifaylor. of Vancouver is contemplating a hike to the north 0i British Columbia in search of gold, repeating an ad- venture that he undertook thirty years ago. Mr. Taylor, who has reached threescore years and ten, states that there is not any work so hard as “loafing” for a man who has been active all his years. This may sound like heresy to the agi- tators for a six-hour day. but it is an attitude that many still believe in. Certain," prospectors give no heed to hardship and ask for no help from anyone-Montreal Gaz- ette. ’I_'hc appeal to support the fund for the erection of a Sanatorium for Tuberculosis patients in Trini- dad has twlo important aspects. Its purpose, to provide a permanent memorial to our beloved Soverigh on the occasion of his Jubilee. will commend itself to Indians, no less than to every other loyal element in our cosmopolitan po atiorl; for by none is His Majesty more respected and beloved. and to none do Indians yield pride of place in their patriot- ismr-Trinidad Guardian. 'I‘o live is to gain from life all that it has to offer, and to give back all that we have and all that we are. Life itself is generous. 1t takes nothing from us, but offers us all that it has. We are its ser- vants. We bask in its sunlight. Its very rays tell us to live! How can we dare to despair? why should we falter because dark days appear? Life is bountiful. Beauty is a frce gift, and is to be found everywhere, and merely for the taking. To love, to give, to appreciate, to work. to sing. to serve-not to complsin— this is to livel We wlsh no Ill to Germany. We rejoice that she is expelling the poison of Marxism from her system. and is recovering her spirit and her marvellous capacity for work. We do not wish to go to war with her; no onewishes to go to war with her. "But we cannot shut our eyes to the fact that. in defiance of all treaty obligations, she is re-arming and preparing for wsr on a scale even to 19 4. libr the moment she wants peace, for she is not as yet ready to strike. But. as Lord Roberts acid with profound wisdom in i012: “Ger-runny strikes when Gennsuyis hour has struck,” Once more she is ionising towards Der Tap-National Review. U. l. Slcretnry of AIl-lenltcrs call nations group themselves together nslng doses that are from three to ten times the dose prescribed by physicians." I am quoting Dr. E. L. Bortz, Phil. “dolphin. iii Annals of Internal Medicine. ' , Dr. Bortz urges that dirlitrophenol and drugs of the same chemical composition» should be" included in _the list of dangerous drugs, thuymn. trol and use of which should be gov- erned by the federal Blood and Drugs Act. ' However Dr..Bortz has much to say in favor of dlnitrophenol in m. duclns weight i; it is, used under the supervision of the physician. Used with caution, the drug should v than that of the years prior ruin H!!! THCNIIIDWIIIOGVIOQIIIQ o’ prove to be a. valuable help in the n-eatment of persons who mg 1t, difficult to lose weight by the usuul, established methods." Dinithrophenol acts best in those cases whero the overweight is due to overeating and underoxercis g. when the increased weight .ls ldhe to some gland disturbance in the individual, dlnitrophenol often re- acts badly and gives poor or no re- sulth. In some patients when the thyroid gland in the neck is not as active as it should be, increased weight results and it is only natur- al that this new drug shouldbe tried \ g l , ,',, , @ g .... Air _ Peril In war p‘ _. to solidify the nations in mutual understanding for the preservation of peace. Consequently. as a meas- ure of-safety. Britain's, air force is beinggreatly increased not for the purpose of menace to the civilian population‘ especially. in the event- of the un ‘, happening. up‘ that end we road almost daily reports of drills being held in the British isles in safety measures against possible attacks from the air. But to just what extent the devices e would . protect human life in actual warfare, when the dreadful vehicle of destruction would be the highly developed modern airplane, is a. platter of some speculation. , Pierre Got, former Air Minister of France. in a recent article on "Peril in the Air," points out that the continuous‘ and rnazevllous progress of aviation has made chemical warfare an abominable in these cases. m; Bortz reports two such cases where after three weeks treatment it was necessary to stu. the use of dinitrophenolowing to the appearance of symptoms of poison- ing. The drug therefore is not a substitute (or thyroid extract which is so helpful in those cases where the overweight is due to lack of tlilyroid juice. Dr. Bortz states fur- GI‘! “That dlnitrophenol is of real Vflllle for the rflluctioh of body weight in certain selecte’ patients who find it impossible to reduce Weight by cutting down on food, is no doubt true, However I do not un- reservcdly recommend its use, and I believe that when the medical pro. fession arouses itselg to its obliga- tionof service to persons requiring or wanting to reduce their body weight and outlines a ‘sensible method by which to do it, then the general health oi the community yi'l be benefited greatly." Overweight sholfld receive the 31mg attention from the physio n as any other ailment. ——————————- is than i . Premier Hepburn on lrgjffiviric. can give uviiifi Unemployment (Sydney Post-Record) Another striking illustration of the transformation which takes nlwe in a political agitator when faced with the responsibilities c! office. has been afforded in the recent sharp joinder of issue be- tween Premier Mitchell Hepburn of Ontario and the unemployed strikers from the Crowlsnd town- ihh). Addressing a committee of these strikers on Monday night, Mr. Hepburn used language which was singularly in contrast with his public utterances regarding the administration of unemployment when he was leader of the i- tion a year ago. Then he found that in every dispute respecting luiem- ployment the Government he was opposing was always wrong, while the agitators exploiting ununploy- ment discontent were always right. On Monday night he told the strikers to go back to work, to cease listening to agitators and give evi- dence of their- good faith if they wished to receive any consideration from his Government. "You can't bluff the Province of Gltasiofhiie declared heatedly, "and just to show you that you can't. we're going to call your bluff. We'll not consider your demands until after you have worked next Monday." And he ad- ded. “you fellows are the victims of outside agitators and when you loam to decide and act for your- selves I'll talk to you. if you want to starve your families. you will do so on your own responsibility." The point of view thus set fort by Mr. Hepburn is sound __‘, even if thp language in which it has been expressed might hen been toned down a little to conform with the dignity which is heoe to give the right kind of emphasis to declarations of this character from the responsible head of a pro- vincial administration. (mtarids new premier hes been in office long enough to learn that it is easier to stir the timbers of popular dis- content than" to quench them. wanting our cotton. This situation '4 will worse instead of better un- ’ m! u lmmun _ USED TIRES eat help ef corrective ledlsl. are ‘wliii “too ‘his... greatlroiii: gggmlh-WASHING and run can be ewuaes m 1°.’ ‘mmcfi’ Wlltwi 1”r.."’s..""'u?.£ GREASlNG-TIRE ff‘ °[',f,,,';‘,’,,",,,,,,.,,,,..,.,"""'“"““'.‘.§ . . I of giving our cotton away through REPAIRING’ ‘u; m, u‘ p, m; unseen“ ouspriossorinsecun do wiflnmumfla feqllll fill‘ IGNBQ‘ volume OI 01MB con‘eeuohery ‘nd smokgf‘ _ "' ’ ""2. t: .§‘.‘.‘l§‘.";. G" E H“-”°"°‘°" “war nut" claims. years l9!"l'°“""' she has been s. nation of . nora- tcd people, conscious of new vigor. ~ wtful of repression, and l possibility. There is not s, capital of Europe. except Miscow. he ‘aye, which might not in a few hours be overwhelmed by deadly "sacs. But certain minds, doubt- ‘ess through love of symmetry, he 1ays, have thought of ing nhysics to chemistry,» and believe they have found in the former the means of paralyzing the latter. Awarding to th . a process has been~ discovered enabling planes ‘to be halted in their flight. An air fleet could be prevented from crossing a. given none. On a. mysterious order from the ground ‘the engines would stop running; the disabled airplane would have to land immediately. A sort of ‘nvisible and insurmountable bar- rage could thus be created above tllraltened states and anxious c . Are these assertions the product of romantic imagination? Are they the result of secrets leaking out. or of anticipaticns? he asks. Before setting forth the facts of this situation certain general re- servations must be made. Nothing During the Great War the Ger- mans succeeded in bombarding Paris with a piece of artillery of very long range. The first shells were a greet surprise to everyone. by the prospect. - -_._ -..< (mung) Aftcu-‘lhecraahthcnccmcathebillfcrocete-saot.‘ ler Judging a; the amount of chcquq damage b-al automobile’ but possibly heavy t; m chm-zed uslnst individual bunk . . - view ewnsaodb my. and Manor-mu: involvodlnthe accident. accounts. Canadians ue great v. . r scientific authorities that future . ~ " . ' cheque writers. and have explicit V. ~. . » Iars will ismly be rouaht lathe ' “m, m‘ any‘; yuan.“ efiyfiewliwweilflw faith in the soundness of Canadian . air. it ls in the event _____ , mum-M m n“ bI-nklnc instltutlonfih m ocnifi- _ gmm- u u" 0M, Mrs of the nations! We mom. nowaumiuaocueaIficr-oas. m mucosa. 601w! which Oanad banks en _ gm war -_ ‘ . - ' has been augmented by the fagaii . - . a ' tan pqnllctloh labia centres m"u',j,,jf,ff‘ou'f Qgi“ yo," "NW"! "W!" "W1 "WWWY- ' that no bank failures occurred in isle-nu W-Bulsgfltfl. _ would. miaouotesly suffer, beyond n”, ‘mutual, “m; m“, u,“ h, m, m, ,,, m. m, “w, u mum,“ vgthavmigion durgig the dreccnt “Mm Goon AND “Poms "l1: For Thou has brought us happily - rates. . ‘ ' , . _ result the w] -oy:r."¢qL' fir“? 0" gigggfiifl +6133 W”; m, II-Wm knmmldlm o‘ fro this, our Jubilee. . Fulllnfonnatloaaaubmlttcd without eruption. , odofmrnltting ymetsfs d ' Tun . huunnclifmlnalltt wurtalklom ' _ ' almost universally ovler so “i. “mm emanating from mrolmn coun- ,,,,,,,;',§,,§',",:g£1,1",,k7_"° one’ & cent of the total payments of “It is exceed: laffuumfim“ cm: tries and the re-armiug that is And 1mm m, cm, o; u“ “m a] . _ accounts 1n Canada during 19x4 m, Fume ‘m, no hwqunv- “m, admittedly Nine 1111M i!" Unite u. glad accord ' i asraausunn 1m we; egky cheque. e Canada ,0 prevent ma indiscriminate wk 1:11am llowotllfilg it is ‘all’? To pledge our warmest lfealt Imverquecn Street Charlottetown i ginnfilgiihziiliioyteiiimwfi fig,"- ‘have been commune on air o“ m’ m“ wnu‘ --w* __ In actual results, the visit of Sir drug) mulls“ an, w” armaments Great Britain, while m“; o, m, nation“ we “may, That Justice may be felt Where o'er our storied flag may reach, On prairie, strath, or veldt: But from vain boasting keep us free, And own our Jubilee. Lord of the nations! Use us still, Our Royal Household bless; , Thy purposes through them fulfil And human wrongs redress, And fill our hearts with amlty, This day of Jubilee. \ —Alexa.nder Louis Ikalsr. serve as iln excuse for society chatter, but neither fears nor hopes should be founded on them. After discusing the possible discoveries of science to put a magneto out of order and to atop it by means of eleotro-megnetlo waves, and thus place an airplane. on a death dealing mission hora de combat, Pierre Got concludes: "Nothing justifies the belief that any nation ius discovered a way to stop airplanes in full flight. From time to time, in periods oi unrest and anxiety, such reports are put into circulation some- times to scare the public. some- times to reassure it. But these reports rest on no serious facts. In the present state of science. physics does not seem to give us awalyofwardlngoffthe ills which chemistry could cause. , “It ls regrettable. Let us trope that some inventor of, genius finds away tostop the fleets which ht some bombard w our fac- tories and cities. Let us hope that this inventor takes his ‘discovery to the Dengue of Nations so that it may serve to protect all peoples and all races against criminal de- signs of possible sggreseors. "But merely making wishes will not fend off the catastrophe with which we an threatened. Aerial and chemical warfare make man- kind run a mortal risk. Life and ideals, every thing is threatened Only a. great effort or collective solidarity can preserve us." CHINESE SEEK PROCESS mono/term. England - Repre- sentatives of the Chinese govern- ment have visited the low-temper- ature carbonisation works near here, seeing the process of extrac- ting motor spirit from coal with s view to its adoption in China. The best French artillery experts asserted that it was ‘ to conceive s. gun with such orange: They declared that the shells must have been dropped from an airplane and not fired from a cannon, But they hsd to bow to ghfi evidence. Science had been at a t. The same phenomenon can occur again. ‘In the scientific world e is uhforseeabie and dseoncerting. What we know is very little. It is possible that, somewhere on the globe. an un- known scientist in u secret labor- atory has found a way to influ- ence the motors of an airplane flying thousands of feet above him. But this scientist may also have discovered, a way for a man to live without breathing or to be hit in the forhead by a machine- gun bullet without being incon- venienced. .Such possibilities may R UP TURED ? End your rapture troubles. MvI-Iwofl method. No In straps. No elastic. No stool, pcndve. Factory ser- vice. Guaranteed. Write for full lnformatiur. SMITH MANUFACTURING ANY m", g Preston, Ont. Established 1m Li‘ llacllonald & Barbour SERVICE STATION . is new open for business Complete line of Irfllsafdllys: BRALHMIN casualt- _ editors ' i i Attention Truss Waarcrs To those of you who aroun- furtunatc ugh to have to wear a Truss we ask the III- tlon. Are you satisfied with the one you are woarllll? Does it at properly or is ll In out of dale style, cousin untold agony. We can Dro- wnls o, perfect fitting, modern Callinandletlhfltflilfll‘ plums and let as send you some for fitting, All alas and styles gt prices to suit every- body. Macs Pile Ointment Gives quick relief in all oases of and Pull- It brhaga almost instant relief from the itching, burning. stinging sensation of piles and ls a positive care. The Two Macs 140 Great George Street Headquarters for Trtsa Mall Orders Prcmptly Attended to RESTING TIRED EYES Btralnodflrollol-llllliufi‘ porlry RIM IND Niall ~thsg Theyneedmuethan rest. ‘nsyaeedlhclllflfllll- Use Beef Qlwlul TEA "WAai-‘omoszzs s.{{..rr..ul_.. JIGKDN WILL PRESENT KING tion's loyalty and conve WlTll annaass con- gratulations on the compygttgou o1 26 scars of his who. it was an- . nounced today. Presentation will b; midi’- through the Governor-gen. oral. The address is on pgmhmgnl command of the Canadian Legion, and is surmounted with the Log. Britlsh Innpire Service League. will 1011's crest and is signed by the no, present the Kingwith an iiluminat- mlnion President Brig-Gen. Alex cd addmssexpressing the organiza- Ross. “a KI s! (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OTAWA. May {i-The Dominion caanrran ruauo accoumranr . mailman or ' OANADIAN SOCIETY OF COST ACCOUNTANTS _ OOIKISQIONIB FOB TAKING AFFIDAVITS IN ‘III SUPREME COURT OF I’. E. I. l’. I. l. BEPIEBENTATIVI ‘I'll CANADIAN OIIDII.‘ MEN'S TRUST _ ASSOCIATION. LIMITED. IANI OI‘ NOVA SCOTIA BUILDING OIIABLOTTETOWN, I’. B. l. i ' loo-II“: Imam cranes up and muss. labor living ofllcc methods Installed. Ocssucocntlnginstitutcdtolnitspeclslraqalnnanl. Ill“!!- Illftofly old annual audits. Balance sheets and Profit and Loss Accounts prepared. Income Tu returns " llp and riled, F‘ made s ‘ seam and Limited lvlalllfls Companies Incorporated. P- 6- f0! 8- nsmrnona ma. It is extremely “important to give puppy, foxes a right start by early supplying urishin food. 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