ii IIIMi-"I. Ciadhl. lltam and , jaecehta lit! "3"" rllsicllallilnlrrcwll culnnllll Dalhfloullad jdporyoaeillalvaneellalloa l. Ilsa-Insular. ll lamest, IJJ . - I A. lacllnrol. DJ Illlnotoi I imam. I is. Idler and D-l. Carrie. ‘ lflllllflpeoieflthalvalaal lallusd- lailalalaandllulenllhus. ‘ THURSDAY,‘ JUNE I, I885 FREIGHT learns ‘*- rnpetitive Rail Rate Reduc- Hons in relation to the Maritime Provinces“ is the subicct or an in- tax-eating brochure published by the ‘haustlortatlon Commission of the Maritime Board of Trade. Detailed figures oi rate structures are given. In a foreword it is explain- ed that the Maritime Freight Rates Act, which provided for approx- imately 20 per cent JQCUCUOII in the rail rates within the Maritimes. excepting import rates. and on the "preferred area" proportion of the haul to other Canadian points, has largely been stultifled by reason of reductions in tolls to the Central Provinces, principally for the pur- pose of meeting motor truck and water competition. The relatively small population in the Maritlmes has not been able to afford high- way improvement to the same ex- tent as the larger centres, conse- quently motor truck competition has not been given the same incen- tive to propagate as in Ontario and Quebec; hence the railways have not been forced to implement oom- petitlve Maritime rates commensur- atc with the Central Provinces. This is the problem which the ‘Transportation Commission, under the management o: Mr. Rand H. Matheson, has set itself to solve, and the first step has statistical information on the sub- ject. It is well to have this inform- ation in handy form, but tbs real taskJies in convincing the railway authorities that the status d sec- tions '1 and I of the Maritime Freight Rates Act must be main- tained, irrespectivo oi the principle of competitive rates. It is a question oi fighting concrete cases on their individual merits. The progress made in this direction will be" the true meas e oi the success which the Transportation oommimion has undertaken to achieve. The Com- mission has behind it the strong support oi the Maritime Govern- ments and Maritime representatives in Parliament as well as our Boards of Trade and business interests generally, and there is every reason to believe that the work now being performed will be productive of beneficial results. HEIGHENKS’ REPLY In‘ the Senate the other day Mr. Lemleux and Mr. Dandurand queried the House leader, Mr. Melghen, as to the prospects o1 a trade treaty with the United States. Mr. Iemieux dwelt on the advan- tages which would accrue from a greater exchange of exports be- tween Canada and the republic. adding: “It seems to me that the Government might get better re- sults if it exercised a little more ingenuity in relation to our econ-. omic relations with _the United States. It looks as if the Govern- ment is simply marking time." This sally gave Mr. Melghen an opening of which he took full advantage. "The honorable gentle- man begs of us to be ingenious and resourceful, not merely marking time in this matter of a retiprocal arrangement with the United States. The position oi the Government in a general way was very clearly an- nounced some time ago. There are reciprocal arrangements and recip- rocal arrangements. Very great care must be taken in this country to sce that any arrangement which may be made is acceptable to the people of Canada and is a sec forward rather than a step back- ward. It is possible to have a recip- rocal anangement which would be very detrimental. The manifest _truth of that assertion needs no expansion at my hands." The Gov- ernment leader added: “As regards using resourcefulness to get something done, I wo “ whether the honorable gentleman's memory is falling him For nine years he was a distinguished orna- Jncnt of a party which had pledged it: faith to this principle of reel?- roclty. Br,‘- when was its resource- ‘fullness? Where was its ingenuity -h getting rosultofl The tariff erect- ed against II by the United States ‘ u high when been the, f compilation of the fullest available - our goods one aficr another-forty cents a bushel against our wheat, three cents a. pound against our cattle, and so on. My honorable friend's party showed no resource- fulnes, its ingenuity was dormant, it got no results at all; it did not even mark time, but slid backwards. Things got worse year after year and were at their peak of disadvan- tage to Canada when that party went out oi oiilce in 1930. So it is pretty hard to take lessons in re- sourcefulness and ingenuity from honorable members opposi ." senator Mclgherl, of course, was right. Nothing could be more amus- ing than to hear members of the Mackenzie King Government pro- testing against the fact that our products have been shut out of the United States. The several increases in the American tariff between 192i and i930, which closed the doors to our products, were all im- posed while the late Liberal admin- istration occupied the Government benches. flDITORIAL NOTES The country is at its loveliest. We are nearing the longest day oi all the year, and it happens to be a Saturday. » Mr. and Mrs. Robie Tufts are de- lighted with the large appreciative audiences attending Mr. 'l‘lifts' ex- oeptionally fine lectures on Island bird life. This is Mrs. Tufts first visit here, and she is charmed with the scenery and enthusiastic over the industry, progress and hospital- ity of our people. This isthe sort of impression we should make on all tourists in“ order to bring them back again and yet again. Messrs. W. K. Rogers & Co's C.N.R. ticket ofdce and insurance business will be moved soon to more central premises in the Currie Block, Queen St. The tendency of business is north, and since the C.N.R. Hotel opened, property in that vicinity has been at a pnem- ium. For thirty-five years the W. K. Roger's offices have been in their present location, being for most of that time the central part of the city. The new Bank of Canada branch here, oi which '. D. A. Maclfiin- non is Manager. intends moving in the middle of August from its present quarters in the Post Office building to the Rogers Building, formerly the Bank of Nova Scotla. The Bank is not a Government de- partment and is not entitled to be housed in Government oiilces. The removal will facilitate the business of the Income Tax department, too long "crlblrrrd, cabined and confin- ed" in its present oflices. The Bank oi Canada has leased the ground floor of the Rogers Building which will provide them with ample oflice and strong room accomodation. A circular letter has been sent by the Canadian Legion Dominion Command to all branches express- ing the hope that members of Par- liament, by mutual arrangement will be able to take steps to remedy the more outstanding difficulties of unemployment among ex-service men at the present session, and that proper provision may be made for the development of plans with a view to early action next session by a Parliamentary committee. The idea scams to be to keep the Legion out of politics. with this object the Dominion executive council of the Legion have held a number of conferences with the Cabinet and leaders of other parties in connec- tion with the report oi Ml’. Justice J. D. f-lyndmarrs Fommissi -n. Fol- lowing these, the council have is- sued the present circular setting forth (A) That all parties realize the far-reaching importance oi the rec- ommendations made by the Hynd- man committee and the necessity for implementing its recommenda- tions as far as possible. (B) That all parties were reluc- tant to open such wide "qucslons so laic in a pro-election session. (C) That all pal-ties recognise the desirability of eliminating these questions from political con- troversy and o! following the usual practice of dealing with them by ru-llcmentary committee but at this late date it would be impqsible to secure effective consideration of such important problems by such a committee. (D) That all parties am\willili8 to co-operatc in an endeavour to implement the report, insofar as it is possible, by mutual agreement and without making it a matter of eontronnv. Notes By The Way The prayer of the economic lll~ periaiists today is for a greater un- dcrBi-andins and p. " i applica- tion throughout the Empire o! the virtues and principles oi reciprocal trading. With Empire Free ‘Ikodc as the ideal to be aimed at, all in Trinidad as in other British com- munities thc world over should wol- come such a call as that emanating from the London meeting organis- ed by the Empire Chambers of Commerce. We should all determine to do everything-Trinidad Guard. an. Nations must live and lot live. The horror excited in the minds of English-speaking people by the ex. has not died down, and the friendliness oi the recent conversa- tions in Moscow may surprise many. But government is "bottling" in Russia; a. form of government has been acclqited by the Russians, and the other Powers have no right to dictate to them in the matter. The thevry oi Communism is not strict- ly adhered W: it has been found impracticable, and in the course of the evolution of a workable 5nd durable system it will disappear. It is uninformed theorists outside of Russia who imagine that Commun- ism has been a success in the Bov- iet Republic. The probability is that Russia. in sood time. will be fierce- ly fighting the Comlrlunists.—The Australasian. The collision near Washington bBi-WEBH a school bus and a. train has dramatised for the moment the med of eliminating railroad cross. ings in these high-speed United States. The Federal Government's ofler of $200,000,000 of the $4,880,- 000.00!) relief funds to pay for con- struction work to minimise the grade-crossing danger has been PIOIHN-ed in part by increasing pub- lic concern over an annual grade- crosslng toll of 4,500 human lives. —Boston Christian science Monitor.- 'l‘bere is decided merit in the pro- Dosal of the Hon. Dr. J. A. Faulk- ner, the Ontario Minister of Health, that the word "insane" shall be de. leted from Ontario‘: statutes wherever it may occur and be re- nlflcedgby the phrase, "mentally ill and fcfective." We have made much Progress from that dim per- iod ln' which individuals suffering from mental illness were considered to be in such a hopeless state that they were confined in virtual pris- ons and set apart from the world for the remainder of their days.- Brockville Recorder. The flnal disposal of Louis Rhl on the gallows ended a chapter in the Domlnion's history which held some dark pages. Veterans oi 1885, now few in numbers, are to gather at Toronto late in July to recall old days. Simil r celebrations have been held in th West at the loca- tions of the actual fighting. It. is creditable to the country to note that some oi the survivors of the rebellious forces also have gathered and have fratemized with the vet- erans oi the Dominion forces. a half-century .havirrg obiitprated memories as well as scars. Hitler has decreed that native Germans who have emigrated to other lands must return to Ger- many for military service. It is be- lieved that not many Germans in Canada will heed the call. For one thing, they owe no allegiance to Hitler, no matter how fondly at- tached they may be to the father- land. Then there would be the question oi their readmission to Canada should they wish to return to this country after the term of military service. Most Germans in this country are peace-loving, law- abldlng, industrious and successful, and probably most of them when they left Germany were glad to be rid oi the regimentation which modern Germany imposes on its citiaens- and have not the slightest idea of submitting themselves to it agaln-Goderlch Signal. The great Mussolini, about whom we hear so much, is heavily in the red", has given Italy diminished trade, higher prices, lowered wages. Germany can't pay her debts. Neither Turkey nor Poland has bal- cesses of the Russian revolution n anced its budget. Only England, England with her democracy and rcr parliamentary system, and where men can stand up and crit- lclze without being shot, has done that. It is something which, in a world gone mad over dictators and colored shirts and men graded like livestock, makes democracy and the old ideas of fmcdom take a warmer glow. We have had two years of talk about economic security being in- compatible with political liberty, about the need of reglmenting men and stifling their conszienccs in order to give them bread. The story of old England shouts back trium- phantly to that desolating creed.- Ottawa Journal. Once more we see Communist Russia embracing a bourgeois vir- tue while Nazi Germany, the sup- posed defender of middle-class sol- idity, continues an oblique attack upon age and. conservatism. in Russia the journal of the Icague of Young Communists exhorts its readers to “honor their fathers and their mothers" and declares that “rudeness, disrespect and ingratit- ude" to parents are not Communist virtues. In Germany the but‘ pastors reprolentcd in the Augsburg Confessional Byncd have sent a memorial to the Hitler Government declaring that they cannot obey a Government whose commands seem trey cite or the Hitler Youth agains t the traditions of their elders-Balti- more Sun. e CH.5_RI.OTl‘E'l‘0WVN v all‘ a . Q01!!! Definition-Ml FIVE TYPES 0F IHGIAINI - ' 0N! SIDED HEADACHE All over the world a determined attempt is being made to find the cause oi migraine-one sided head- ache with digestive, nervous and other disturbances. * In an effort to study this dis- rssing ailment a large city hos- pital advertised for patients afflict- cd with it, and many hundreds ap- plied for this opportunity of learn- lng its cause and a possible cure. ' It has long been felt that over- work, worry, sluggish liver, sensiti- veneas to certain foods, inherited tendencies and other factors enter- ed into the cause of migraine. it is interesting therefore to read of the work of Dr. Paxnlez of ‘Paris who has clone a great amount of re- search work on migraine, In the Medical Press he states that there are five general or com- mon types of migraine and the treatment varies according to the type. i. Migraine of digestive origin. A diet that can be easily followed should be given. Tile only fat al- lowed is fresh butter. 2. Migraine due to slugglshness or other disturbance of the gall bladder and the liver. Here a diet in which all fatty foods are avoided is absolutely rlecessary—butter, cream, fat meats, egg yolks, oleo- margarine, bacon, cheese, pork, sal- mon, mackerel, icc cream, whole milk. These are all excelle it foods ‘and should be eaten by the rest of us, but not by one who‘ has the “1iver" type of migraine. The treatment in this liver type is the use of small doses of Epsom salts before breakfast every morn- ing, followed by lying on the right side for three-quarters of an hour in order to "drain" the gall bladder. 3. Migraine due to “sensitive- ness” to foods. In these cases the food causing the symptoms should be looked for — meat, eggs, choc- olate, starchy or other foods. Pat- ient must find the food causing the trouble. 4. Migraine due to some gland disturbance in the body - the thy- roid. the generative and the pituit- ary in base of skull. In these cases the gland extracts-thyroid, ovarian, and pituitary are helpful. 5. Migraine due to blood pressure and to nervous disturbances in which certain restorative drugs are recommended by Dr. Pagniez. While these five types are the de- finite types some cases would ap- pear to be of the "mixed" variety; that is they are due to more than one oi the above five causes. To the many sufferers with‘ mig- raine the above outline of the caus- es and treatment of migraine should be of great help. Reading The Parable (J. Ii. Middleton in The Mail and Empire) Rev. E. B. Lanceley read the Parable of the Prodigal son. Be- fore he l-egan the weather was hot and the church was stufly. Before he ended the day was perfect and the church was ersunny hillside by the Sea of Galilee. Here was a pro- nunciatlon careful, correct; with every vowel tree and every conson- ant featiy made. There also was an appreciation of the hidden rhythm which gives nobility t0 English prose. Here was something new and strange. a spiritual quality above and beyond the mechanism of the language. I "A certainman had two sons,-" only six words and the congrega- tion had begun to sit up. "And the younger of them said to his father: ‘Father. give me the portion of goods that ialleth to me.‘ And he divided unto him his living." sud- denly everyone saw the two-the bearded. courtly gentleman, and the insolent young pup kowlng him- self to br: handsome and wise and his father to be unfashionable and behind the times. -The reader was not trying to make an effect. l-le was not think- ing of elegance in speech and ges- ture. In truth, his natural gestures and attitudes were angular rather than easy. The compelling quality o: the man was in a pair of biasing eyes and a mouth mobile with feel- ing and humor. He was as far from being an "elocutlonmt" as Heaven L; from hell. "And not manv days after the younger son galhe:ed all togeth- er—” Here the drama was bngln- ning and the voice qulckened-“and took his journey into s far country." We could envisage the distance in the lingering on the word "fun" we could sew the‘ scomful ‘ and the still more scornful youth on a~ white dromedary. "And there wasted his substance in riotous liv- The reader paused till the scene was definite and clear, "and when he had spent all." There ‘are no other half-dosen of words in Eng- lish which convey more. even when road casually. But when read as Lanoeley read them we could see banquet halls, wine. women and song in no end, pimps and prostit- utcs. gangsters and thieves, oily swindlers dressed to the nines: we fortitude, familiar in German his- tory, flames I-Zlill-Tlll pastors da- cialp there can be no obedience contrary to what they believe is God's command-Christian science Monitor." ‘time an about M00 kilometres of splendid roads in Palestine and Syria 00d!!- On the other lids of mail. Oyrenaleau roads an as good as the beat in the world. Ivan a busily tackling the mien. The recent semi-chid- cfwruhaandlabryw GUARDIAN lThe Ago Khan And of Moslem, His Race Horses (David Alexander in New York Daily i Khan, swarth! iidncl who desertcd the tem- ples of the East for the 09mins life of the Occldent, is known. mainly to Americans as the owner of the Epsom Derby . but he ismorolllreaoh outof“'l'hc Arabian Nights" than an owner of race horas. The Dot-till 54°11'11" rncdan does not belong in the smart hotels of the Riviera or in his man- sion in Inndon. He becomes morl believable u you imagine him squatted upon silken cushions in schehe ‘ ‘s Bagdad. m- the man who frequents P» race course -in checkered its 3nd gray toppers, who has made a princess of a circa-slacker and who gives orampagnc parties to hun- dreds during the season on. the Gold Coast, is regarded asga divinity by 75,000.000 followers 0f time Eastern branch of the Moham- medan Church. His full title is His Highness the Ago. Khan, Sultan Sir ‘ ed ‘Shah, G. C. S. 1-, G. C. I. E.- o. o. v. o.,x. o. I. E- and Hon. LLD. (Cambridge). This god on earth of the Moslems, who is sun- posed to be a direct descendant of the prophet, Mlohamet, is 57 years old. He is the all-powerful head of the Mohammedan Church, Shiite branch, who are the followers of All. l-fe is to million's upon millions, the living symbol oi all the mysti- clsrn and religious fervor of the an- cient East, but he doesn't give a hang for that. When Jlis jockey rode Bahram home in the Derby he slapped him on the back and said, "Well done. Thank you. Fred- dyy ~ He is also one of the most fabu- lously wealthy men who have ever lived, makingmost of our Ameri- can millionaires look like eligibles for the dole. He controls countless millions, not in stocks and paper profits, but in cash and gems and other items of wealth that can be seen and felt and counted and whose value does not fluctuate. In addition. he has an income of from $1l.000.000 to 815.000.0110 a year from his followers. He is the only man on earth who is literally worth his weight in 201d -and the Age r Khan is a very heavy man. Once a year a phlal of his bath water is sent to the shrines of his followers to become a holy relic. And in return they send him gold to a weight that matches the weight of his body. His followers heap presents of gold and Jade and ivory and silks and rare gems upon him. u is due a divinity that walks the earth .but such things mean far less to him than the two purses he was won in the Derby and those he has won T110580 that the $44,500 he won Derby could mean much That must t0 him. to John W. Gates. But troves of the blast. money upon horses. His bids at auc- auctloneers gape. And guessed right only a small percent- age of the time, despite the great horses he has owned and the great stakes he has won. He purchased his first horse in 102i. In the lot was’ Cos, which won the Queen Mary Stakes for That started him. and racing has been like an opiate to him ever since. O Youth whose hope is high, Who dost to ‘Iruth aspire, Whether thou live or die,‘ O look not back nor tire. Thou that are bold to fly Through tempest, flood and fire, Nor dost not shrink to‘ try T118 heart in tormenis dire. If thou canst Death defy, If thy faith is entire, Press onward, for thine eye Shall sec thy heart's deals Beauty and love are nigh, And with their deathless quire Boon shall thine eager cry Be numbered and expire. could hear the Speaks tire vacant mind. .lsnd and he began to be in want.’ the swine did eat." Then Lanceley seemed to stat awry in the English . Th0 OOQNIIUOH anew and felt the thrill oi it. on the in other great English classics. Not in the have seemed to such a man like a $2 bet would have seemed just as he represents divinity to his followers, the Derby purse represents achiev- ment to him. He would rather own a good horse than all the treasure No man ever has spent so much tions have made bidders gasp and he has him ' loud laugh that "There "We a mighty famine in that We saw the lecherous gang scurry- ing away as the ghosts vanish at cock-crow. so we came to the feed- ing of swine and “the huska that Brow before our eyes. mil six inches s: were added to his lean body I Mum. will"! in ascension. real-ht with which clumsy. or careless lips now saw it The man behind the lcctern was march ~ be introduced as to the ma; brother who m4 justice if ever a man had. "This l v in a package which . . . Why Mussolini Barred Times (This is the editorial in the New York Times on account of which Mussolini has barred that P8P" from Italy). In giving a general outline of the policy which his new Government means to follow in foreign affairs- Prime Minister Baldwin said some chiefly to countries under dictators. The ideal being staple government, coupled with f of expression. he ranked Great Britain first in that regard. He pictured the United States as still atrusislinawlth im- mense difficulties. The instability oi the French Government was again, he said, giving anxiety to all of his friends abroad. Even WhU-B Mr. Baldwin was speaking, how- ever, the French . people We" demonstrating once more their capacity to make c. sharp political turn and to set up a Government which at least has the promise of being stable. Concerning Italy the British Prime Minister had s. hard word to say. The Italllan Government was proceeding with military measures in East Africa which were disturbing the peace oi the world. although there was no "concerted public opinion in Italy“ behind Mussolini in that venture. Italians will point, to oontrovert this, to the great crowds which cheered Mussolini’: belligerent speech on Saturday, but as there is no real liberty cf the press or ’ of expression in Italy, Mr. Baldwin may be right, though his ‘statement was admittedly some what rash. He declared that British foreign policy is now founded upon the Ileague of Nations. "That was the main reason he gave for having strengthened the Forelim Office by adding a minister, Captain Eden. who should represent the Govern- ment in all matters relating to the league of Nations. ‘To that agency he gave the credit for arriving at a preliminary B-lmrement to arbitrate the differences between Italy and Ethiopia. But so far as launziliige can do it, Mussolini has already repudiated that form of settlement and affirms that now, having two scores to settle-one with Abysslnia and one with Ethiopia-he means to go ahead and do it without any regard to ooinion in other countries. Obviously referring to Great Britain, he protested that. he was ,. , ' todoonly what the British did in building up their empire. They went straight to their desired objective without tolerating interference by any other power. - t‘ th tobetrue-itlsin order in rem d Mussolini that, at the time to which he alludes, there were in e tenca no such agree- ments renounce war as an in- sirument of international policy, no such treaties pledging peaceful measures and a resort to arbitra- tion, as now constlutc a solemn in- ternational oblige/tion for Italy. She Max Factors Society Beauty Aids Created by Max new. "WWW!" make-up genius, who for many yea" n" new chief ooelnetician to the scum and stage profession, Max Factor preparations are in a large way, reapnualbls for the splendid couqolccflons of the oelebritiu of thg screen. Home of our lines ’ oiudc Face Powder Powder Foundation Cream PRESERVES ~ 11's MOISTURE blunt and bold tlunss- They related . has put her name to treaties and “Hallo “THER f’ salvo ovllli MY PACKAGE . . , nlviiftrlrr , i - SMOKIIGTITIIBAGBO lllclllsv declarations of policy which my directly in the face oi hcr mllital-y expeditions in East Africa. It would be strange if the Council of the League did not, in these circum- stances, take further action in this matter. Captain Eden has pressed for such a course and evidently exlpecte to see it adopted. ' Prime Minister Baldwin had some general remarks to make about dictators. It is true that they often present for some time a. semblance of governmental stability. It is still true in Italy, as Cavour said it was year-s ago, that "anybody can govern under martial law." To do it with the courts open and the press free is another matter. Dictators, asserted Mr. Baldwin, are always vanishing personalities. They last only so long as they can maintain themselves by force. They found no dynasty and leave no successors. Mussolini has kept himself in power longer than most people thought possible, but the earth al- ways trembles where he stands. Any day a mat public catas- trophe or a vast shaking off of Italian fetters in order to be ‘free might leave him helpless on the ground, a shorn Samson. Rome dispatches say that Mr. Baldwin's sgaecch was taken their in very ill part. The better part would be for the Italian people and Government to take it seriously, and not to imagine that they can indefinitely go on setting at naught the considered Judgement of man- kind. ' Chrysanthemum Culture For commercial work, cutting of our, anivhemums propagated in March or April are suitable for planting into beds early in the months of June. The soil in the bed should be five or six inches deep; the distance between plants, six to eight inches. For those who are interested in or contempl- ate the“ growing oi chrysan- thernums, the Dominion Depart- ment oi Agriculture has issued a pamphlet which covers all the important points necessary to be known. Chrysanthemums are pro- paguicd in four different ways, by cutting, division, seed, and graft- RIVAL PIPE a now packed difierently » For lwntném finlmnce and coolness it is “PEERLESS AT THE PRICE” 8r NICHOLSON because it is the quickest way by which a stock true to name can be raised. Cutting is the methqd adopted by the florist. The cuttings are first potted in two and one-half inch pots: then into four-inch pots, and finally into six or seven-inch pots. The plants require abundance of water with free drainage, but the grower must be guided by the foliage. As long as the foliage remains dark and glossy, it is a, sure sign that too much water has not been given. If too much water ls given, the foliage will turn yel- low and sickly looking. Also, ii too little water is given, the plants will show unmistakable signs of requir- ing moisture. It is very important that the drainage allows the water to pass through freely, thus pre- ventlng stagnation or soil sour-hem, a condition conducive to disease which results in failure. . - . . The Brltlsh Splrlt (Ottawa Journal» The British Leglonu proposal to send s deputation of British war veterans to. Berlin receives support from the Prince of Wad Bald the Prince: "I feel that there could be no‘ more suitable body or organisation oi men to stretch forth-the hand o] friendship to the Germans than w; ear-service men who fought them ip the Great War‘ and who have now, forgotten all about that," Thus the British spirit. After Napoleonic Wars, when certam the Allied Powers wished to impose crushing indemnitiea upon Pm Britain objected Having W most of the wars herself, she h no desire to delay reconstruct’! and create new bitterness by poi’ ing from France's defeat. And was vindicated by subsequ history. It had been so with the Britild; attitude toward Germany. ‘Th; British Government, althoufld agreeing to German indennities, never tried to enforce them. Th payment would hswe meant a so ing of billions to British taxpayefl, would have avoided the controversy over war debts. but that didnl matter. The British idea was wipe the slate clean-to bygcnes be bygonee and start ing. Cutting is the most important over again. IILTGIPMIIII: BRAHMIN Use Best Quality TEA ORANGE“ PEKOE. _ alarms was Sold only in red airtight pan. w ‘ . foxes a right start nourishing food. which is especially hi of highest sheen and out the whole aeaaon. from factory. It is extremely important to give" puppy This start can be given by feeding IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD. it ie made from carefully selected ingred- ients universally recognized for high standard nutritional content. IMPERIAL PUPPY FOOD formula is prepared with a_ view to the development of pupslntc active, sturdy foxes with pelts To accomplish these results must be fed early and. regularly through- Socure from your local dealers or dfwi Imperial Biscaij \ Clllflbfidipiflfl, Eu l- by early supplying, gh in food values as faultless color. "lmpcrlals" Co” Ltd; Phone 121i,