1;! .__; _ _ . i. m-am__.a_.._ ’ I i a? .' ‘L e ‘l i- b i c ,,_ it I .’ .r i l, , . i m.‘ ‘- . j ‘ 5i. i V. . f l‘ 2_ “sf. i “race _ Iiii lliiliiiiiiiiiiilil liiiiiiiliiii nun-an. w. cum» :. Iclmnl vlee-rn-Inuu J- It linen: SOUIQIIII- laltih COL I). A. lllalflllllo D- 8. . Ilfltcr and llnugcr. J. ll- Bnrucn Anoelnleklldltor. I). K. Cnrrlu new torts Representative-drunk It. Iorthrll Chicago lleprenentltlvu-li. J. Power w» ouauunn nu a Qhtnllcl tn- the hIlovvIlI nut: In Glnrlollrlownr Iorltlmo Itcllonerl. Grafton m. l’. T. In: l7. Prince M». Grocery n; I. P U57 g . Rhee: b0. ‘r’; 9t. chain: L‘; 3'“; Icwm $51.} n " rm‘ one». ozmRa-rm Strut. ll I .lrl. L. DIIMIIO. ih Spring Park Ill. J. ll filfnylor, Grafton Street. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1924 lit-l- comes sacs {Labour and one Liberal. Two un- —~-—- ‘Iver-attics and Orkney and Shetland In all ages human greed and haste have “m w be heard (mm to get rlch has suggested the kiIl-| ing of the goose that. lays the gold- D0 3°‘ won-y over your ‘my on cgg. ui all ages also the com- ‘"197- ns 59mins better and bet‘ mon sense of humanity has strong- ‘er every day‘ Though “m a m‘ ly advZst-d against the unwise kill-rile brackish it soon wii_l be all right- ing. In the present‘ age the hasfe to 5i!“- iil ‘he “m” h‘ 5°°d for “B “y. ‘get rich has become-a veritable ob- WBY- film's!‘ “o! 5° 5°°d for mach‘ session. hfa-terlai wealth is the insry 0i‘ "Wm" P'°"““’"°““ goal of the great majority and on thc road thither many a goose' iay'ng its iludly golden egg has been In addition to all the ordinary and exu-aordiiuary revenue Whivh ' ~nt ha received deliberately slap in thc foolish ‘he m“ gmlfgnzfie Huidred M, hops that the unlaid eggs of the u has couec b lion Dollars cf European debt. dur- U a ing the past. two-and-a-half ‘years. ‘Ya it still goes behind. What can lt be doing with all this money? future might secured at bound. Today. as a result of thc return to power of the Iialdwirr Conserva- tive party in England. the British‘ Empire enters upon a new era an‘ era ‘in which preferential inter-im- perial trade will be given an op- portunity to try itself out. Without dwelling upon details already well readers it may be Premier‘ Ramsay MacDonald says he does not envy his successor in the present state of trade and Ren- eral outlook. Rather cynical. of course. but lust what we expect the "IIIICFOWDI-Bd" King will my when He'll g0 the llmiit Meighen to known to our said broadly that the fur flung Bri- tish Empire its dominions act in Pvery zone, is to all intents and pur- his time comes. and then leave Mr. bring order out of the chiwii he. h” created. BY THE war 5y thirty or more amalgamation: effected in Caruda since Confeder- ation the number of Canadian banks bus been reduced to twelve. Almost all of these have their headquarters in Ontario and Que- bec. ieuvins the Marltlmes and the West to he served by branches of the big flnunc al institutions. We may not relish the change, but since the days of creation it has been the order of nature that the blg fishes should swallow the little ones. The Prcaidontlal election takes place today. five pr0Vil1Cia~l by-oiec tions in Quebec come off tomorrow andlatcr in the week the federal by-election in West Hastings. Ont.. will be of prime interest to many Canadian politicians. To Canadi- ans in general thc Presidential con- test will command as muchatten- tion as the recent British election. because it is nearer at hand and our trade relations with the Repub- lic are so extensive. We cannot shut our eyes to the fact that we owe much hostile tariff legislation to the Republican party and that present indications point to anoth- er Republican victory. It will be a week of elections, grout and small. all the more inter rating from the fact that in the la-st general elections in England. the United States and Canada. as abs-o in Ontario, Prince Edward island, and Newfoundland the gov- ernments of the day were over- thrown. This fact throws doubt upon thc result of any election any- where. With regard to each and all 0f them we are inclined to adopt the view of the cautious Senator Sorghum: "The questions narrow down to one compact and precise~yct elusive problem— How many people are going t0 vote tho way we want ‘em to?" poses self-sustaining. The virilc in- dustrial manhood and the hardy products of the temperate zone. the‘ fruits and other natural products of the tropical zone. tho trade routes The naflonal contemnce o1 the Premier Vcniot in New Bruns- ' k h' ~ - . —- . , he“ m the King Edward Hotekbe dissolved until after another Pa"? 19M‘ session. In the meantime a by- Toronto- on 17th inst. 0n thc Seven Seas-mil are its and ers, representatives and officers from the several provinces includ- ing this province have flready signified their intention to attend. The conference will be epwh-mflk‘ lug “in party affairs. Its work will all tinder thr- conirol of its own people. A-ll the world's vflrirrl com- modities. all its products of soil and iiii-‘iofy. 0f forest and mine and sea the Brtftish dominions in the way of trade. Within a short time no doubt. a are available to all preferential trade policy. a policy nation‘ giving a preference to Brllsh dom- I Union and anLl-Uunion meetings will be established a protective pub-have been held in various centres ‘during the past three weeks, and lothers are still to come. The why inlons as against foreign countries.| ‘t-y which will enable these domi- nions in trade with each other with out unequal ‘n et't.' ‘t. L mp m“ w‘ h meiinga is that under the Union Act the aggregate vote of all Presby- teriau churches will be taken into in the divisions of the church property.‘ Naturally both aides want to make as good a show- ing as possible for the sake of the loaves and fishes. In Ontario the antis have appointed an advisory board of five to assist the various Prebyterian churches until the time comes for taking a vote in each congregation has expired. cheap-labour countries of Europe and countries which have bulill With tariff selves. walls around them- account The atlvantagcs of such a trade policy art-obvious and if carefully] honestly and fairly carried out for mutual benefit should restrit in a‘ great and lasting impetus to the‘ development of al-l our dcmlnlousJ This goose will lay golden eggs] through indefinite years ‘.0 come. if we yield to the haste to get rich. if the dominions wk" “M” ad‘ Out of every 146 homicides in the vantage of each other and of their United states only one person my; mutual protection‘ "my Wm km the death penalty. In a recent sur- lh” mo“ and ‘he 50",“ "555 wlu|vey of 146 typical homicide cases. not be ronhcmmng‘ Pmwmio“ is thirty-two were classed as ‘justifi- deslued m protest‘ wmfl“ r*as°"‘ able. In the other 114 instances. 8M9 "mm; Wm“ the“ "mus “re cases of unjustiflicd murder, indict- emeedcd Protection kms “am meats were returned in only sixty- nina cases. or 60.5 percent. Of the forty-five indicted cases, one-third of the assailants remained at large twenty-two committed suicide and ?--<§>€__ EDITORIAL NOTEB Get ready for your poppies for Poppy pa)“ in eight the evidence was insuffic- This is election week in Quebec. m‘ m “"“'"‘“' mdmmem‘ Among the sixty-nine indictments. British Columbia and U. S. A. vcryhody- except In the ver eleven were ‘no trial’ cases. remaining fifty-eight trials, dicta of ‘not guilty’ were rendered tn sixteen cases or 27.6 percent. Of the forty-one adjudged ‘guiltyfi thirty-five served time with hppeal pending in six cases; three were held for new trial, one was paroled :nd one was executed. While crim- incl processes are too dilatory, jur- ies too indulgent and judges too Ieuient- and all should be corrected, the great remedy lies in preven- tion. Eight out of every ten mur- Quobw a Emma“ to hum hamster-era were exploited or underpri- ' I the best crop in twenty years. ' 10nd n in childhood. Given a h i I t d cannot best ours, however; txmtden. w o "one a" roman m It has no foxes. the Bolshe- vikls seem pleased with the restrit 0f the British elections. Only three out of nine Canadian candidates were (infested in the Bri- tish elections. two [liberals and a Labour. The great day-the greatest day —ln Charloirtstownhi history will by the unveiling of the Soldiers’ monument. square deal they might never have developed criminal tendencies. Pro- tection of childhood in one of the in ‘Edmontonfs-trict they had eight inches of luovv on Friday :nd be Dominion and provincial organ- election must be held in Moncton. Ito fill a vacancy and provide a scat |for Mr. Rand. K.C., the newly ap- ipointetl Attorney (lenernl. As yet no announcement has been made of any Opposition candidate likely Ito take the field. There is not [much inducement to enter n very doubtful contest w‘th only a single session in prospect. I . I The women of Canada comprise ‘one half the country’: voters, and any voter is eligible as a candidate l iCommons. the person of Miss Agnes McPhail. No one woman, especially an un- married one. and a Progressive, can adequately represent Cnnad an womanhood ln Parliament. She should be given matronly assist- ance and companionship if pos- sible from both the Conservative and Liberal parties, each of which contains many bright and capable women, well qualified to takepart In legislative activities and to re- present the women of the Domin- ion influentially and with grace and dignity. The masculine clement ha: long- perhaps too long~been accustom- ed to excluslvecontrui oi‘ nomin- ating conventions. Politicians as a rule are not wholly wanting in chivalry, and they should see t0 it that at the next federal election ne or more women are nominated for the House of Commons in each province by each political party- Glve the ladies a chance. which they have not had as yet. and the beneficial results-may surprise us all. A proper respect for the moth crs, wives and sisters in Canada demands that this shall he done. Stlnlay Baldwin, the victorious Conservative leader in Jnzland. has been photographed since hifl latesttrlumph, and his picturohaa been given to the reading world. He appears smiling radiantly and with pipe in band. From Bismarck to Baldwin many eminent states- men have been great smoker!» n01 that the narcotic weed imparted the Biff. of statecraft, but because it soothed and alloyed the cares of state which are "thorns upflii the brow." Th: discover of America n"! the world toba and the potato. I1. has been said that the potfltfl has been as valuable to mankind as the steam engine. But the en- gine puffs smoke a: it Works! A lighted cigarette in the hand" 0i i‘ My h“ been aptly described as "'c cylindrical roll of tobacco with fire at one end and a fool at the other. The tobacco habit, wheth- Nflun’ “I brew“ d“, nhlhnthropyier in smoking or chewing is a life- THE ALERT AGENT An insurance agent who looks upon his work as a profession. has learned a few things by observa- tlon. iI-‘or instance since blood pressure is now an important matter in the eyes of the insurance companies. this agent tries to watch this part of the examination, ‘ Accordingly he arranges with the physician to be allowed to be pres- ent during the greater part of the examination, and always during the taking of the blood pressure. Hla idea is that ‘in the presence of the agent; whom he knows, the candidate for insurance will not be as nervous or excited as he other- wise would be. Further he knows that this first time the blood pressure is taken. it is higher than it will be at any subsequent time, due _to this ner- vousuess, and he attempts to counteract it -by his presence. Another couple of things he has discovered. is that immediately preceding a meal. and particularly towards the close of the afternoon toward six o'clock, the pressure is somewhat less, due to fatigue. And still one more thing he has coached his man about. is that when the cuff on the arm is tight. enod by the pressure. and the doc- tor is about to read the pressure. that he must breathe ‘easily and softly. He m-ust not take a long breath. A deep breath puts up the pressure. Now all this is quite pro- per, and in not “clieatlng" the doc tor nor the company. because under the above circumstances the man is getting the reading as it really is. under normal conditions. Of course the phyolcian does not accept nor reject the candidate on blood pressure alone. The heart and kidneys are the big factors in the average man examined. but where there are other hhlnizs that may be slightly aualnst a candidate. hiizh blood pressure is not going i0 help his case any, ‘Tally Selections - roa ' i Guardian Readers- o . l. OOOO-O-O-O-O NOVEMBER 4. ‘i924 it Ila still falling. Naturally that is an end to lurvsntlng there. Of tho Flirty-seven ram la Scot- und for which returns have been rmclved M went Conservative. 2| for the luv. n“ * :nd social service but. the homesdong MM o; l|lyery upon it, Vic. :nd the churches are in the lasfutim. an hard to break as the app!» analysis the place: upon which welm-fl i" driiik- S‘ '9 "i" i‘ °:"::“' mortgage upon s purse. oy “u” M’ m w“ u’ “mum m- who is well advised will not begin n” m" M m” “m! “d "Fpemto smoke until he in at least forty HAViE Ailub GOOD:—The young lions do lack. and suffer hunger; ior membership in the House ofihut they that seek the Lord shall So far only one wom-aninot want any good thing. and the wherefor of these guther-ihas been elected m that body |n-34;10_ I’salr1\ ~PR=A-YER:—Our Bountiful. God, we have confldelice in Thee ,for we Irave never soon the righteous for- saken. nor his seed begging bread. CONTENTMENT ‘Little I ask; my wants are few; I only wish a hut of stone (A very plain brown stone will do) That I may caiil my own: And close at hand is such a one, In yonder street that fronts the sun. Plain food la quite "enough for me; ffhree courses are its good as ten; Ii" Nature urn subsist on three, Thank Heaven for threc~Ameni l always thought cold vlctual nice- My choice would he vanilla ice. I care not for gold or land; Give me a mortgage here and there, Some, izood bankctock. some note of hand. Or trifling railroad share— I only ask that fortune send A little more than I shall spend. Jewels are baubles: 'tis a sin To care for such unfruitful things- One good sized diamond in a pin, Some. not so large, in rings, -'\ ruby. 8nd a pearl, or so. Will do for me—f laugh at show_ My dame should dress in cheap attire ' (‘(10011 hfliilfy aillw are never dear); I own perhaps I might desire Some shawls of true Cashmere- Some narrow cnapes of China silk. fLike wrinkled skins on sca-lded milk. Wealth's wasteful tricks I will nul learn, Nor ape the giitvrlng upstart fool‘. Shall not carved tables serve my turn. But all» must be of bublf Gil/B Krtllplng pomp its double can; I ask but one recumbent chair. Thus humble let, me live and die. Nnr long for Midas‘ golden touch; If heaven more genh-ous gift: deny, l shall not mia: them much,—- Too grateful for the blessing lerit Of simple taste: and mind content vi-X-ii-v-ir- WHAT GOES UF- The airman was QXPllining the use of the parachute to a group of aightaeera. - "And what vrptrld happen if the parachute failed to opdn after you jumped off?" asked the listener. "Oh. that wouldn't stop me!" re piled the airman. "I'd come down Just the limo." grown up. And not then. union a family council of mother. boys :nd m": m, married and m. ohlldrlh um ausuu mi u: mm to time. : foufilubl! moi- u "am ‘ looting the Holy City of the Pro- propaganda. tiuschool of (orcp, the; most famous manifestation. of Unity of Moslems course. wus/ the Mahdisc move- ment which was shattered by Kit-I at f‘ ’ man twenty-six _ A Vanished Dream ‘BEDOUIN h" .. ‘ in ” Itroyed the Ezyptlm power in tha' ‘Iidan and had. inflamed millions; i with the conviction that at last the Mesa-Jan predicted of m Pro- phot had arrived. It was a fanatic- iim which-buried 40,000 dervlshes again and agliirfagainm Kitchenefs hollow squares and was spent only when out of that number 11.000 dead and 16.000 wounded lay on the ground. Kipllng's certificate of mtvit to Euuzy-Vvuzzy is scarcely exaggerated. Strbicct simultaneous- ly to modernism and to orthodox revivalism. uprooting and secular izing at Angora and demonstrating phvt- are a reminder that. it la with Moclem unity as with so malty other un-ities. Distance lends sn- chantment. The nearer view re- veals the eternal human factor :t play. Before the World War Europe worried over the Pan-Islamic men- ace. Timid people saw 800,000,000 Mohammedans spring to arms with a spontanuiity qpmdicted by Mr. Bryan for his own countrymen un- der somewhat different circum- stances. says the New York Times- Ths signal for the Jahad or holy war against the infidel would be lfltllldtd from Constantinople, and years as“. but not untilit had de-- _ '~ The Great Bccl Economy. with‘ the hcip of llfibme the‘ nppefiliiisl ‘ilelicioufs Meir Patties, M". Pies, Stew: or oftqdgy’; dinner Ti” “i A Tliéraais scores i 13mg“ I '32 of using OX0 Cfibtf: 88R meat —- money _ trme-‘work-and make component“ dishes take better and have greater food value. for the literal interpretation of the Koran at Mecca. the Moham- medan world reveals ltself to the outsider as most. remarkably like the rest of the "world. ii. ' ' Mother Shipt0n’s - ' Prophecy (London, England, year 1M8.) A house of glass shall come to puss in England. but alas! War will follow with tho work In the land of the Pagan and Turk: ' And State and State in fierce strife Will seek each- others‘ life. f But when the North shall divide Asia and Africa would r spond. Abdul Hamid gave the signal, but. there was no response. The Mosiem or non-Turkish blood knew Pan- Islamiam for what ipwas designed —a political weapon to be employ- z-d for Ottoman purposes. The World War laid the ghost of Pan- Islamlsm. Believer: Fought for lnfidolc. Instead of turning the Prophet's sword against the Glaour. his fol- lowers were found arrayed against each other. in thr- case of Britain's Believer Indian troops the True the south was actually found fighting for the A" Eagle Sim" {mp1 in the Lion's Infidel against the Successor at C rlnotrth. m. h h n i Istambul. Though political Pan- “"81!” W "i" "Yiii-‘s i‘ i‘ K“- d id . fill h lri lti Islamism had been thus dls- A“ “a? ems .1 e WM w ‘, Primrose Hill in London shall he. And in its centre a Bishop's See. Around the world thoughts shall fly In the twinkling of an eye. Waters shall yet wonders do. Now. strange, shall yet be true: The world upside down shall he. And gold found at the root oftrtree, Through hills man shall ride, And no horse Or ass b0 at his side. Under waiter man shall walk. l Shall ride; shall sleep; shall talk; In the air men shall be seen, posed of. thespirltual unity of Is- lam remained valid in,the outsid- er's eyes. Here there was certainly greater justification. for the Popul- ar ‘belief. But in this respect. too. the solidarity of Islam has boen exaggerated. This is hlteflfflil by present events in Arabia. Politics may enter to some extent into the Wahabi war against the latt- Kinll of the Hedjaz. But there in no rea- c0-00QQQ m“... ../ _Policy P. 21296 (Ago 30) for issued 1904-—Amiun| Premium $1 CASH vatua AT mxrum-rv 1024 ............ 4425p Excess oven PREMIUMSPAID ......... .. roan Peiicyholdar had option of Vcdlliifllliflfl policy a; a fully paid-up panicipatinq contract for $5000 and with. drawing wrplus $166; or applying in purchasing a partlcl. patlnq bonus of $3220,—ln addition to the protection for 20 yearn. Particular: of :imiiar policies, mailed on request to llynilman 8t Provlhcial Managers The Great-West Life A 61 Queen Street iutta. w. _.,> l 0 00000000000» 0000000o++~0+09o0+ 00000-0000 000000; The Reward of Wisdom at Thirty isooo (20 Payment Life) 58.50-_—Tohal plid sano. ‘ i +v0+o+< o-ccrooo-c-oo-ov-Qvoxooo-oc-oo ($0., Lu. alurlncc Company Charlottetown, P. E. i. . ., . ~+o0000o00+00o+o000o4 00000 0000000000000 004000 0 0, [LINOLEUVM CAN BE. USLD ON VARIETY OF FLOORS IN HOUSE A hOlIEtBWIfe moving into a sub- he poured over it a special liquid wax and worked it well into the linoleum. Witch this hardened iili‘ floors iI-‘lli a brilliant polish—in fact. the surface is us smooth as $2500.00 ' vance of Chriatiantity by preachlns represent a Fundamentalist Mos- lem movmnent n.0w_200 years old. Once before the camel-riders pour- ed cut of the desert and stormed Mecca and went so far as to do stroy the sacred Kaaba. The Crusading Spirit of Islam. I The orthodox followers of lhn Saud. it is to be- presumed. have thought of Mecca. and Medina as certain sections or Texas and Ken- tucky think of New York City. They are places given up to thc lusts of the flesh. the homes of idoiators and money-changers. It did no thclp Hussein's cause that as King of the Hcdjaz he took on rlch- ln white, in black, in green. son for doubting that the root "on m wafer 61m" MM, cause is religious. The Wahabis As easy as a wooden boat. Gold shall be found. and found. {Md “he W“ 3"" m“ Blaine-ll 50ft In a land that's not now known. Before her people shall be free. Three tyrant rulers shall she see. Three fmrs the people rule alone. Three times the people's hope is gone. Three rulorsin succe Each springing Rom ' ‘zdlffererrt dynasty, Then shall the worser light be done. England-and France shall he as onc. Bclts of vivid green leather print- nd with borders of gold are worn with plain. black gowns. ‘unban ironic found the floors im- qiosslble. She had irauilsorne rugs glass. ‘ ‘ |ilh€l "best wood floors would just mur- the ‘for the kitchen and bathroom." ex- claimed the distracted wouum. However. she consulted the head oi‘ the floor covering department wit hthv result that she now has suitable linoleum on. the floor or every room and sufih arcqufslte de- signs, especially in‘ tho bedrooms. In the hails, living 110cm ‘and d-‘ining room shc- has an inllari linoleum in ‘a beautiful pattern that is usually filling it iv. fit-for on sec, in ligand our enirn Oh. yrs; uilshken for a paqtict floor. She says thc secret of this tit-hrs- i0il 110-8 in ‘thc proper laying of the T)", m linoleum. She had an Hxpert. to do in u". this ahd after carefully lsyir" it m.“ any LEATHER BELTS ‘course. tho housewffa secs to The young people pronounce it‘ ever" in dance flours. Ui‘ ii. Fire and water shall more wonders fflmct- Th0 379111183013" hail 1° have mili- Uifi "0075 8T9 kept in primv do one rot-m where thc rug could be condition by regular waxing. England shall at last admit a Jew. "iiilmi lip and they could dance. ‘iii “W! The Jew that was held in scorn H“? will“? Purse “Tiiiill "Oi P6P —<*> Shall or a Chrmmn be horn‘ - mit haiduroatl floors and just then To QLEAN x5711; Th”, “m” three will lave“, France along came the _fricud and suggest. Be led -to dance awbloody dance “m mwleuui- "L-imleiliii iii i111 right Remove fur from a. kcttlu by nearly full with watt-r m which twoteaspoouftilla of bornx has bmn added and boil for hall an hour. Empty and rinse thorough- o trslnK boil fresh water rinse again. Keep it Dark May-I)! course you know that Jane» every- Rement is secret. ‘so I am told by ii0iiy!—l’sarson‘s Weekly. mic-ii an who drops his anchor Siiiillth of Dcspond nnvcr farther. , es spate and went in for hobnobbi in! w-ith the British. palavering withthe French, and otherwise dc- filing hl-msulf with the thrones and principalities of the I-‘eringhi- This revival of Moslem orthodoxy has in the Wahabi crusade only one of its manifestations. it has been more strikingly in evidence during the ruefully. attested by Christian missionary workers. The Bcnuoll fdovcment. In Central Africa. between the Sahara and the Gulf of Guincu. con- vents have been frequently drawn to the Prophet through the tradi- tional instrument of the sword. Be- fore 1850 the Hausa peoples were thus won over and four Mohamme- dan k‘ gdoms vrected in the heart or tihe Northern Congo and the (jhud region. The work has chiefly been carried on. however. through persuasion and by the relilipllfi ordcrs whom we know in the mass as dsrvishes, The most powerful of these orders is the Sentrssi. with their capital somewhere in the d0- aert south of Tripoli. The Senussi are, in. principle at least. not a fighting order. Their purpose has been to erect a barrier to tho ad- a rigid and isolated orthodoxy. Their tenets are in most reavficlii like the Puritaulsm of the Wahahis Students of the subject are by no means certain that the Senusal movement will not yet score "tre mendous results." The Mahdin Movement. . Of the other school nf Moslem .__-—@o>—-—- NOVEMBER L-You are met-h- odical :nd very trustworthy.’ and win ‘Q1 on wall. Friends value your advice. You are a great lover of horns. fond of children, and de- vobo much of your time to making your home attractive. Don't for- get that love mean: hilt everything th:t is best ip the world. Your birth-atone i: the topal. which means fidelity. Your flower is the chryctanths- mill! a The Standard Food if ' v last seventy-five years in Africa. In Your Yo," the northern half of that continent Guarantee pa". the crusading spirit of Islam has of Dun" been scoring successes. frankly, if Quimy , {he Bu‘ , A. I/I/liiflw/ Y‘ w.» 8" . Ital. Trade Mark Endorsed by the leading fur buyers as well asuby expert fox feeders the world over. _ Imperial Fox Biscuits are manufactured 0n a Secret Scien» trfic Formula-the result of many years’ experimentation and accurate observation. They are fed in P..E. 1's largest ahd most successful fox ' P81191168 811 the yea!‘ Piiilild. Supplying a ‘balanced ration and pro- ducing the pelts that bring flhe record pfigg Sold by wholesale dealers, also direct ‘from factory. ‘ Imperial Biscuit Company" l Charlottetown, P. E. I. -_.,. giosr-cmTnof-‘T -..'. T’ , . - . - ,,___ ---. . , . for Silver Foxes