i . 1 I l 1 ~ ‘ I I 1: 1. w w. ,.,,, ,,,,,,,.1- Olloa l-ionra-l- t lili illill Jllilflilll lillllilllii .n-n.hleat, W. Cheater fl. New Ya U cage llapluoel Idmltl Monetary, Melt. 00L D. A. llaeKla on, l). U. 0 l-lalllol all Manager. J. It. Ilia-lei” Itepn-nntgtlvwltrank It. N rth VIoo-rarallelt. J. Luau-late Idllar, a II. tithe-ll. J. Power n. uumm '0. K. Outta. ran commando-actual.» Notes By The Way Boma thauaandn of olefin have returned from TUESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1924 HISTORIC ANNIV ERSARY Yesterday, August 4th. was ‘the cnth anniversary of the declara- Silent Funeral (By Dominionmwe Eervlce) LONDON, Altar. "ML-Silence in lttllhlflvll tin» solcmnlty of thc fun- eral at llr. ti. tiray. for "25 years a im-inIn-i- of ihc I-lastings Town Council. ‘i'ii-- iofiin was lI)\\'i'l‘i'(l at nncr 'nl-i Illl" LHIYI‘ without any <:‘r-" mony and without words being sptzkvn. lly ilit- graivc-riltln stood the Archdeacon of ilastings with hi3. \\'ill\ Ii in his baud. aiiil after a few miuiiti-a a littic earth thrown on ilu- coffin voiit-liitli-ii the cere- mony. From start to fin sh not a word was said, tin- Ari-lnii-iistiii nodding his Iii-ail bow that thc si-rvity- was enili-il. 'l'lu- strangciii-ss of’ tho inst rift-s was, it is unilcrsttitiil, in accordance with thc ivishcs of the dun-tor. ~04 0-6 M» o4 +o+oo4+~+v++o 4 FEEDS FEEDS I I HORSE, CATTLE AND HOG FEEDS Poultry Feeds Baied Hayand Straw, Feed Oats, (Black and White.) Bran, Shorts, Hog Feed, Oil Cake Meal, Cotton Seed Meal, Distilier's Dried Grains Feed Wheat, Crushed Oats, Cornmcal. Cracked corn. Call Meal. Chick Feed (for young chickens), Germ Mid- dlings (for Hogs), Beef Scraps, Bone Meal, Laying Meal, Egg Marsh, Milk Mash, Alfalfa Meal, Charcoal (for poultry), Crushed Oyster Shells, Grl‘ (for poultry), Lice Killer, Poultry Spool fic, Stock Food, Legbands, etc. Flour Robin Hood, Royal House- hold Beaver, Queen City, Gold Medal, Diamond, Whole wheat Flour, Graham Flour, Pastry Flour, Table Corn- rneal, Rolled Oats, Oatmeal, etc., etc, ' _ Wc selii WHOLESALE and RETAIL at LOWEST PRICES. We are buying Feed Oabs. Feed Barley. Feed Buck- wheat, Feed Wheat for cash or in exchange (or Flour and Feeds. l‘ (Iarter & C0,, Ltd. FLOUR GRAIN _FEED.'? OO&O-O'O Q O§§-§O~§-%§§-§Q-O§-§O-Q-§§§-§lv Q SOMEBODY SOMEWHERE WANTS YOUR PHOTOGRAPH MBy BA YER ______________ 168 Great George ‘Qfgfl i EL. ,.__“1*f;“l“ Professional Cards i Palmer & Palmer H. J. PALMER, K. C, Barrister, Etc. Money to Loan Bank of Nova Scotla Building Charlottetown, P. E. I. MaclIohzIl-dgz McPhee ‘ B. A. .l, A. McDONALD, H. F. McFHEE Barristom, ‘Attorney, Etc. _ Money to Loan ‘Riley Building Chari ‘tetown TJ-__ Mark R. McGuigan I ER. SOLICITOI-‘i, Money to Loan Cameron Block Charlottetown, P, E. inland c. c. ArchlbaTd Graduate o! N. Y. Post Gmduato Mndical School and Hospital Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Office Bayer Building Great George Stroat BARRIST ETC. - 4-_ . 0-0 ilritain, the ho gre he world. halt firs, much also remembered Hill still sbuddcred at. The Wat's stars have been, at least partly i-tmct-ulcd; the gross has grown »,rt-.-n over the millions of graves, l\'\'l' the blood stuinetl and shell urn i-arth. Nature has morcifuliy JlililPlI cruelly and human agony. tho GVIIIPIICPB of human Thu devastated countries are ba- iug ri-iluiit nnd re-hnbilltated. and ucn and ivouien luivc restinu-d their int-st for food nnd raimcnt, food iilll raimi-nt to take the place of all that was destroyed by the hurri- And much had bccn Almost all the accum- auc of war. tlvfilffiyflll. nations of all past ages had been lrstrnfyetl, till but the Will t0 live, "he will to be-lrce, thc will to live indcr duo's owxr vine and fig tree, iunc tiuring to mukc thcm afraid. i‘bis lms stirvlvcli thc world's ,l'(!.'Ili‘:lf _war tlp-to-dnto and,’ in one liililllliilllly or anotlicr, shall sur- vin- all future wnrs. ———--—<-o->-i- ONE HUNDRED YEARS Although, ns recently us a bun- ilrcd yours ngo, this fair Island of ours was little uiorc than a forest wllilvflltiSfl, much of the rest of the world was wcil advanced in many of the nrts und inventions which i-tmstitutt- thc civilization of today. And ycl, from thc viewpoint of tu- day, what a barren, inconvenient ion of War on Germany by Great tenth anniversary of t 1115!‘. In the history of Mitch has‘ been forgot- t-n since then, much of what hap» ililltfll during the following four and projected around the World 8111! being taken of persons and objects thousands of miles away. This development hi! fifty years, much of it within the past photographs are occurred within the past ten yetlrs. They bad no photographs, the ti. having been discovered in 1839 by Ilaguerre, Photography devel ‘tlllrtl slowly and has become the great sri ll Iii ~todny only within the niuniory of many now living. Anaesthetics were unknown. The in use of other and chloroform surgery was discovered in I847 by Sir James Simpson. Previous to that time surgical operations, great nnd little were attended ‘with in- conceivable agony nnd seven cases 5n every ten were fatal. ‘Pin-y hnd no automobiles in those days, the first road machine of this class having been built in Paris in I902,when a man named Angieres of Paris, France, built n machine which attained n record speed of n The machine, like uil other inventions, developed mile in 48 seconds. both in speed, comfort and general Up to 1911 the high- est speed recorded was n mile in usefulness. 23.40 seconds. The mcrest tyro in automobillng can now beat this re- cord on our country roads, if not on our city streets, and the speed is increasing. Tlit-y bud no friction matches. When n man waptcd to light a fire or his pipe he did it with flint and steel, the. occasional‘ spark finuiiy if not later starting a binzc in a‘ piece of prepared tinder. Tho luc- in 1827. Space and time forbid tho enum- i-rntiou of the utilities, the indis- worid it must have been! Ilow fcw and inadequate wcre the coal Ivcnienta-s which enabled 11mm mpportunltfes for enjoyment, how l nipossiblc, from thc viewpoint of today. cvcn to live in the world of only a hundred years ago! ’I'lu~ro was not a railway in the yhuli- world the first having been unlit in England in 1825 and char-l tort-d to carry passengers and irviglii at a speed not exceeding. n-n’ mile-s an hour. Compared with: the accommodation afforded by that primitive line the often abus- I'll Princc Edward Island Railway Joaclivs are palatial nnd its speed -hat of a comet. The first railway Iii this side of the‘ Atlantic was the llaitimorc and Ohio Railway built as its predecessor in Etiglund. Tili- lays. iho from London to- New York, iiays. In 1838 the first steamer, Some small boats had been ilropt-llod by steam power for sev- "ml years previously and a. ship iaallcd the Savannah had crossed mirlly by sail anti partly by steam , in I819 from America to England, in 26 (lays. Ocean liners inconveniencing the Tllvy bad no uiectrlc light those days, indeed they knew little it cicctricity beyond tbc fact that it existed. Its development covers ‘I period of years centering largely around the middle of the century] EIMIPIC lighting was first used twnmintirclully in 1881 although for] scvcral ycnrs ct-ntiy oncournging to keep grglgm. i111" P1001112. Tho real marvels in nioctrlc development began to manifest themselves during this I i I i-iectricni wuflfl. The telegraph, b the telephoned tho radio followed iii today the ends of the earth are Ilanolio-J. olflmlmltob pom-labia nucessitlefi, to say nothing of luxuries, which we enjoy today and of which our grandparents of I I” u hundred years ago and our fat/C“"“‘l“ 0" m“ 0"" fill"! 11 livelihood, how few thcir rm“, o! even [my years “so knew French Canadian influx to nothing. Every implement on the farm of today, tbresher, binder, mower] ‘manure spreader. hay loader. hayuhousantl Canadians are now rc- fork and, we cnmiot in short, everything that do without, was un- ilicm 25 years ago. Yet, with all the things they did without they lived; many of them made more money than wu are ninklng today. They had their difficulties, no ‘doubt, they bud their joys and their I sorrows and they moved slowly t0- wards the lcvcl upon which we stand today. with amazement ‘We of today endure. or dcpths—we know not. ———<-oa-—-- A MILLION DOZEN EGGS Little Prince Edward island, sat Nevertheless, It is one of the most quietly prosperous parts of thc Dominion. It was in Prince Edward Island that the fox-breeding industry-which led to the develop- mont of "fur farming" throughout Canada-originated. But diversi- fled ‘farming, with all its branches. previously experl- is the mainstay of the island. This back n m not to Pflnge mcnts in lighting had been liuftl. your the Prince Edward Island Co- Island nor to the Maritime Provinc- Oiierellve Ens and Poultry Associ- ation expects to handle no less than one million dozen of eggs. Last year the association handled 780,- tras, the average price realized be- ing 23.70 cents a dozen. The ll- the United States l0_l,lli0 dozen "er m frlcflm‘ mum“ was mvenu~idliiecaties in the future domlnutc the lcnstern half of the Republic. A hundred years " 1X28 “m! w“ 1m" "5 Prlmll-lvihhcnce our successors will look back upon the incon- y bu“ m’ slmmshlp“ l" "1099, vcniouccs and the privatlons which So, slowly, Smw- °'°“"°‘1 ‘he Ammuc but with ever quickening pace we Ill 17 are moving along, to whnt helght-— southwardmcross the border entirely ceased, which that many who removed to States and returned ‘to family to a new home and gut settled again, more money than in the old days when our fathers fram- ed the proverb," ‘Three moves are as bad as a fire." The returning Canadian: are very wdcome. The contention of one leading newspaper long has been thwt one native born citizen is worth ten immigrants. Be that as it may. there are now a million people 0f French Canadian residing in New England aside from the thousands that are scutt- cred throughout tho other states of thc neighboring Republic. So many are they in numbers that n writer in the World's Work Bptflkfl of them as u menace to the American nation and argues that any further influx should be. prohibited. This wniter admits that as a class the French Canadians that are settled in New England are peaceful, thrifty nnd industrious, but captiously adds, "So are the Japanese." His chief complaint is that like the Japanese they fail to become United States citizens. They keep themselves apart speak the French language exclusively among their compatriots and cher- ish French traditions rather than those of the States. Even wbnt we might consider to be their virtues come under this writer's censure. For, contrary to American custom, they all have large families! And they multiply space and are’ building up Frcnch~spcuking commutilties so rapidly that if the prmwss is permitted to continue unchecked they may within _.'i fow entire section of the ltcpublic enst_ of the Mississippi Itlver. We can! lmiruiy thliik that mu new peril {has aroused niiy widespread nlnrm 'us yet across the border. The truth “lies bctwern- the twn extremes of an cxoilus that will dcpopulatc. Canadian the United States and we are told thgt more are coming. This la in no ' small measure gratifying. It would be more so had the old-time exodus Canadian is far from being true. Tho return movement would also be more plea. snnt to con-template were it not the Canada huve come back poorer than they went. It costs money to move a stock ' gum‘. jiiiit where your stomach is 3| In,“ , Balsa. MD, WHERE hand on thc part of your abdomen under which you thought when: you would put it, Why‘! Well your stomach may be right up underneath your hcsrt or it may be nwuy down at the lowest part of your abdomen, a foot or more uwsy from your heart. The exact location of any parti- ma... stomach was rnlhor hard to flnd prcvioba to the advent of thc X Ray. Skilled physicians were able t0 lounge certain borlluns of it, but it lwns on unsatisfactory method. ' Then the idea of filling the stom~ sch with Kim so ns to get an out- line oi it was tried. This likewise was untiniisfnctory. But wiili the use oi‘ it mixture that would throw n black shadow on a [llIUiiJgfIlDlIlC plate-some bis- muth in iillllf--—-l.llil complete out- line Oltlie stomach was secured. Positions were thou shown that were a revelation to [iliysicinns- Some showed thc stomach right up under the heart, or 0n a cross wuys position, others a perpendi- cular position right at lower pnrt of abdomen, Whut docs this mean‘! That your stomach will try to do its work from any position in the abdomen, Can it do its work as well from tho very low down position‘! Not by any means. You see the sliliple matter 01' mechanics enters into the realm oi‘ that body of yours, and although the stomach throws food into thc uinnii intestine slightly up lilli by means oi its muscular walls, there is such a thing as asking It to do too much. Thus ii‘ the lower pnrt of stom- ach is away down in. thc abdomen, nnd thc upper part which centers small intestine is away up at a point near where the ribs mcct the breast bone, you can see that there is going to be some difficulty In getting thc food from thc stom- ach into thc intestine. iNow what about it‘! Well if you urc feeling in good shape, no indignation or stomachl sins, it can't make uiirch illiter- IS YOUR STOMACH? If you were asked to put your _.-_- A Night With ' The Lions‘ and.» A RadcilffoDugmOw. F.‘ R. G. 8., who hns been after big’ gnome with a camera in Africa. re- latos the following adventure I11 World Wide: , It ivas after a long spoil of dis- appoinmcnt that I sot out, one slur- fous May morning for the Tbika river, in which neighborhood Tone. I bud beard, were fairly numerous. On our way we happened to 8P0! some vultures in a troe—o sill! of the presence, more often than not»! Lloyd’s Agents ORDERS FOR MARINE INSURANCE SENT IN TO THIS your stomach was located I just wonder of-mcat, most likely a lion's kill. Hnstcnng ahead, I searched for the kill, but for an hour could find nothing of the kind. Finally one of the "boys came up und, aided by n keen sense of smell, located blood in some grass not fur awny. The trail led us to a bank, at the foot of which was the dry bed of a stream. Iiere we foundthe rcmninsof a partly-eaten hartcboest, wh'ch had undoubtedly been killed by a lion. _ From the point of vicw of getting flashlight pictures, which wcro what I was after, no position could have bcnn more suitable. The background provided by the bank was excellent, while some over- Iiungiiuo-n trees made n splendid place for tho erection of n ‘hide- up." This was accordingly built, tlirer- cameras being tilncr-il in dif- ferent pus tions, so that photo- graphs could ho got from three tot- ally different angles. At six o'clock that night C—— nnd I had a hurrlcd meal, after which we crawled into the "Iiido- up," carefully closing the opening through which we entered w'tb the ioppcd branches of n tree. Half an hour later, dusk having fallen, a slight sound camo to our earn from outside the “hidc-up," nnd presently we were nbln to dintin guish a shadowy form making its way cautiously through tho grass Very soon the shadow was foli- owod by another, and yet nnnther. That they were lion»), there wus no doubt at nil, nnd I was keyed to n pitch of intense excitement at the prospect _of securing what proved to be rcaily excellent photographs. Eyes Gleamed Like Diamonds Ily way of making sure that the kill bud not been tiraggcd uwuy located, _.Iiowevcr. ii you have much (l|.‘l~' turbance in your stomach, ask‘ your doctor what he thinks about n: Illsmuth nicni in your case. ii’ your stomach is not in its Dmller position and _tl1cro is no hand und a the l States that may yet dominate thc| Our point is this: 1f four or ‘fivo l turning per month more than are still going, it will tnke n lung time ,to restore the balance in view of ‘known fifty years ago and many of’ all our itisses by tnlgration in the past. And whnt have our Ottawa. rulers done to keep our people st bolus and give them employment in (Tanndn. They have given Amer» icnn producers and manufacturers easier and cheaper access to thc Cnnndlun marketwto the detriment of our home industries and grcntiy to the advantage of American in- dustries. They have put thousands of Canadian workers out of cin- pioymcnt and transferred their wages to American workers now manufacturing and producing for thc Cnnudinn- market. This Stimulu- tes the exodus instead of checking it. Let thoae of our city readera who may think that the tide has turned in our fnvor look about thcm. There are a largo nnd Iiwcasing number of vacant houses in Charlottetown which a year or two years ngo were occupied. This is not as It should ho and there must be some cause which m mg flu]; of 5t, Lam-Bug, l; bylfor it. The cause cannot be found ixmiitl carry scvcrni of those oar- far the smallest of all tho Canadian-ml“ ‘my “mum 0t crops iii-r ships on their docks without provinces, and, as its affairs ur. passengers, less spectacular than those of the now cross thc Atlantic in four days. larger provinces, it is less in tho Dominion if not more no. We must in limelight. for Pro- vidence has boon as bountiful to _Princo Edward Island in that rc- gard as to any other section. of thc iqok elsewhere for tho cause. Liberal‘ Government propaganda acnt out from Ottawa minimises the movement outward and emph- asises lthe number who return. The object is political ;careful observa- ticn of any intelligent, citizen must convince him that if thousands of Canadian exiles are now cominlt Edward as that they are coming. Most shucercly must we nil wish it wore otherwise. Moat regrettable of all is the fact that the imbecile waste and extravagance of the period and since that time miracle 593 down. and of this quantity 011- Ki"! °°'°"""““I 1""! I" '“'“°““ l,“ m..." aw‘; m mhtafle in "m |y 14,3 p6,. ,.ent'~g,flded below u, tariff policy tend strongly to pro. moteand accelerate the outward g movement. each other in Fupld succession un-Isocintion last your exported to’ A new process of manufacturing , synthetic marble has been devised in which the marble in made by a in constant and instant lntor-oom-leggs and 151.066 lb. ‘of live and Wet method. In ill!“ 0f "11? 3|" municatlon, the human voice can be dressed poultry.—0ttawa Journaljmetlmd‘ Th’ product h“ m‘ "m. high lustre as marble. i' sooe toooéoo-ooooo< 0000441 growth or other condition, then a l-ttiod wide bell will help you until- I You get your own lllNlOIfIlllill mus- cles developed sufficiently to hold’ ym". mgmm m Hm“, rm," plum!‘ mlpcd rue intensely and Icft me un- away, OIIVlOIII-lly llflfflfiltll ut being the meantime sit crcct and 5mm] erect, {OLE Daily Selections ' FOR Guardian Readers vQ-o-Ovvoo-od A ROVING TO THE FANCY Ono loves at first by chance, ‘through seeing in a glance A possibility. To many girls I've heard Mon use the self-same word , With much facility! Another lover's confessed By one who is possessed Oi? curiosity. Some find in sharing woes A she-Ito,- from the blows Oi’ animosity. The proud man loves because, if a maiden him adores, ‘Tis no enormity, And he ‘himself who loves Iler perfecttaste approves. ln full conformity. And mnnygwho commence Just keep up a pretenco in their duplicity, For-by the stuns above, Oi those who are in love, None find felicity. —-B, Tress. Lived For Hours Without Breathing (By Dominion News Servleol LONDON, Aug. L-An as- tonishing case in w ich a woman's heart continued to eat for four and n half hours after her breath» ing stop d was described at a Wostmin star inquest a few days ngn on Mrll. Emily Elizabeth Roti- wall. aged forty-five. .Mrs. Rodweii was taken iii on a lmnrlon railway station platform while on her way to the British Empire Exhibition. Dr. Dorothy Parsons. of Oharing Cross Hospital. said that cerebral b0 orrhngo was diagnosed when Mr . Rndwoil was admitted to the hospital. . “She stopped hrnnthing at 4 u. m." anid Dr. Parsons. "hilt the nuisa continued to act. and three hours later I called two members of the hnnorarv iitnff to see her. "The heart beats continued for Mnr and ii half hour» and despite the iinnilrnlionpf artificial respira- tion for three hours, and the ari- mlnmratlm, of oxygen and other ivitbout our knowledge, I presently switclicil on my little electric poc- ket lniup. Three lonstbere were. sure enough, but only one was- close enough to photograph satis- factorily. In the light of the lamp tho animal's oycs glcumcd like (llf-iII]0I‘lilil-—-l\ really striking revel- Our noxt task was to reset the cameras and the flashlight. Both C and myself went out, ciawl ing buck to the sucllor will: fe-el- ings of relief when the job had been done. lioness appeared on thc batik, and slowly made her wuy towards thc kill, When she was within a Joni-n ynrdn of ug I pressed the button again. Going out to reset the cnmorns was more unnerving this time than bcfore. For one think. the night now seemed p'tcb dark. while I01‘ another the roaring 0f several lions came from the bush; evidently, our flashlight did no more than frighten them momentarily. Hardly hnd we got settled in the "hiilfl-IID" 8881B than growls cuinc from quite near, wh ic the sound of crunching reach- cd our earn. There is‘ something more than more itncanniness in hearing thcsc sounds on n dark night and not know'lng exactly whence they come.’ Both of us, after a while, found the continuous growling quite unnervfng. Striding Majestically To and Fro Three lions came into view this limo, sirid ng majestically to and fro ilctore ticscentling the bank to the kill. 'I‘licu, to zuuke us more alert und uncomfortable, n fourth lion, giving vcnt to bloodcurdling growls, approached the scene from tiircctly behind us, nnd for n fow [lulpituting moments we seriously thought we wore about to be nt- hckml. At one time this lion was only lhrcv yards from whore WI‘ crouched, hardly daring to breathe, and I begun to reflect that perhaps after all wild animal photography was rather a foolish sort of B11111‘!- Oiicc more I prossoil the button. nnd again the flush wcnt off, this time so loudly that both of us, our nerves nu cdgc, jumper] percept- biy. Tho lions, however, did not ulion, which for the moment grip- willing to disturb the magnificent creature. I-Iowovcr, it was evident that the lion was on the qul VlVt‘, so I pressed the button andlwilh a blinding flush the pictures_were‘ taken. I rush nut of‘ sight, but merely slunk trhcafcd of’ their mcul. With fi-ar and trembling wc ventured out into the opim again to reset tho ramcras, the roaring of nuiny lions sci-using almost to APPRAIBE-D AND CLAIMS BETTLEQ HERE, An hour lutcr a fne sorrow muss" ' Notes at. Lrdmomber a more awe. llflblrlila or_ eerie night than this; and ihtfie were no more thankful mcn-ln Africa than we when at iant dawn begun to streak the sky and we made our way buck m camp. ' ' Former“ Convict ‘Returns o Pri- . son, is ardoneti (Canadian Prue) iidiTTifid ROCK, Ark . Aug, 4._ Tho tragedy of Jean Valjeim h,“ found I1 counterpart in tho story of Jim Plkey, an escaped convict from the Arkansas Penitentiary, ‘llllugt Pikcy's story has n happy and. Plkoy lived for six years Without detection. Ho bccnmc a trustnd cnipioye of the Oklahoma City Wat. cr works. Ilc married and Ijtlgum“ a father. He built a bopie, mum. a garden nnd pinntcd flowers. He adopted thc name Chester Moore. and became known as honst und industrious. Ilc almost fol-gut y". Wflljhglill Pikey. T n he was recognized, black mulled nnd finally exposed by i; former fellow convict. lie rclum- cd to the Arkansas Penitentiary rvudy to complete his Seiitcitce, Then conic the happy ending of his story. lnstcntl of commit. uicnt papers to the puiltcutiary Governor Mcitao issued the sixth pardon of his three und one half Yilllffi 11n1l freed Pikcy from uli coir sequences of the judgment against him and restored bini to citizen- ship. AUGUST‘ 5.—-Ynur judgment is good, you are quick-wtttcd, iuipahis, nnd observe, nnd linvo tho knack of always appearing to good advan- tage. You arc nt-at and fastidious, fund of travel, and popular in your circle of friends. You don't show your love. but you mnkc your homo life happy. Don't be too iund of’ (iutsldc interests, and nover iii- tcn i0 spiiclul fallen, Your birth-clone is ilie aardouyx. which mcuns a happy niarrictl life- Yuur flower is the poppy. shake tho ground as we walked. Your lucky colors are orange and l‘l‘il. romedien. she illedwlthout breath- Ing again." . A verdict of "Death from natural cannon" m: recorded. AHEAD 0E THE REST» , BECAUSE THEY'RE BEST Your Your Guarantee Foxoa of Deserve Quality the Beat Reg. Trada Mark In the Silver Fox Industry as in any other live stock industry healthy animals are the first consideration. principles of health are sanitation and nutrition. The first is easily obtained byfollowing the simple fundamental ruies,'btit proper nutrition is a science requiring stutly. For eight years the manufacturers of Imperial Biscuit have been studying their product in relation lto the ‘Silver Fox and now when you feed Im- perral you ‘have solved the problem of proper nutrition. .,‘\ Imperial Biscuit Company CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. The two paramount; 42-h’: ti. t..-» _...... -__.__l_.__._c.