-.---'~ --.......,_-- .--~........-.'-:¢.."~"......:.-*.+..-.;-~ m lwask sly) U. Iastsltthulsa lmflpusttisalvaaan-sllnd SATUIDAI. APRIL I. 18d Til MARKETING BILI’. Asssflmtisbelngmadetosbow first snnllsckenaselflns and bis fotlwwewinr-sfiamangwhiledoing svu-ytningintbeirpowerookllltbe llsrbsdngliiLars notoppoaedto ‘itswinelplmbutmrlytoceu-taain fastuns of the blll as introduced by the Bennett Government. This does not correspondent with Mr. Riffs own statement. The bas- ic principle of the marketing leg- isist-kin, he claims, is objectionable because it will "create monopolies of producer's in particular occupations. special groups controlling produc- tion, pirrchase and sale of different clsssu of products and commodi- lim.” And he emphasises this as the main point at inss. (Ha-beard. April l9, page 25%). The "special groups" to which the Liberal leader refer-s are chiefly our fsrm and fisha-y producers. 1t rs against, giving these the right to control the marketing of the pro- duet. of their own labour that. he has dslvsd into Givens History of Iligland for high-sounding plati- tuds,sndralsedahuesndcrys- bom alleged disregard of the prin- ciples d Magna Cherta. Our agri- cultural rxoducers, faced with ruin- mg price-cutting under present- dsyJnarket-ing condidons, may well aak, as Hon. Mr. Stevens asked at. the close of Hr. King's speech: "What on earth ‘has the opinion of the historian Green about Msgns Charts gm to do with the price of _ up c hop or butter?" 111s nccmaity fm- the bill embody- lrI lie principle on which Mr. King bases his chief objection was thus etnted in the Lelielatun: by Mr. W. H. Dennis, Liberal member for Second Prince: "Whenhe (Mk. Dennis) went home he had consulted the farmers and mgytypumtthiswmrldbesgr-and thing, but. hs represented to them that ha believed, but did not know. Qhd tlI cental board would have a wllllflfle ill?‘ ““im over the ex- portsble agricultural products of Province, and without that it is no good. WeasaProvince haves right cc constitute our board in suds a way that we have complete poncrcll over every export-able item pf fsnn products. ‘lhen we can ac- mmplflr a wonderful work for the agrlculturista of this Province. Rhea would be one central mas-ket- m‘ m my“! o! prices. We would bs in a prision to sly. "Th!" l" l0 cars of 14c. lcreauiery Wilt!‘ 0'11 Prince Ikiward Island: the nriw i! Q-and-m.‘ That is the positiai we would be in under these conditions. ‘n4 flu but ptmible omditknn for any seller to be in." (Patriot, April of producers, and have found it. im- pomible in many cases to get s fair price, due to price cutting. He cit- ed the difference in butter prices here and at Montreal as a case in point. “But," asya Mr. Mackenzie King. il-lanaard, April l0, page 2633) "the fines and imprisonnrents that. alts to apply to anyone who darn to viol- ate what becomes the law an put. down u} bhe bill, but. m what the law is to be none save the self-in- terested parties are to have s word." let us page Mr. J. P. McIntyre, Liberal M. L. A. fix Second Kings, on this point. We quote again from the Patriot of April H: “Mr. McIntyre asked if the Ms:- ‘ketlrrg Board would have any con- trol as to the regulation of prices and whether it was empowered to penalize those who cut. prices on fish or far-m products. If not, hs did not sec how the Act. would be . . .1Alineisdroppedherefrcm the Patriot report, but the word used was "effectlve.") "Control of prices, and power to penalize those who cut prices." 'I"hcse provisions, it. will be seen, are in the opinion of our Liberal repre- aontatlvu the very teeth of the Act. Without. them tzhe Act. would be a farce. And they are the teeth which Mr. Maokenzie King wants to draw before he gives his consent! Yesterday our local tern ll] hailed Mr. King as “Liberalism per- sonified." What, s slap in the face toltsownpartystslwartsinthe local legislature! If Mr. King is Liberalism personified. to what. hybrid political category do Messrs Les, Dennis, IePage and McIntyre belong-or Messrs. C pbell. An- near, Allen and other loml Opposi- tion members, for that matter. for tIhey are all inone boatsofaras approval of price fixing under the Marketing Bill is concerned. They all voted for it; most of them verb- ally indorsed it; and some of them tried to take credit for Lqtxoducing it. Awordinconclusionin repute the ridiculous criticism of our con- temporary that. all the Mlfilslfli did not speak on the bill in the local Legislature. Why slliuld they have done so? Its provisions were fully explained by the promoter, the At.- torney General. Introduced as a Government measure, it naturally carried the full approval of the ad- ministration. And after the able u_ ents ad- duced in its favour by tho 099°81- tkm, what was there left to say? Notes By The. Way The Ink psapls Lava as guar- nkandwantnoqusrral, witbsny other nation. They soak no con- qumu, nor further "military glory." dasiro Peace, Bread, Work. Bow can we enaura tbemt Let us resolve: To tumour face from the troubled Continent and look to our own lsad and beyond the seven seas to the British territories and free Doaniniona; To withdraw within our borders and build our trade anew within them: To equip our defences by land, sea and sir with for-ca strong enough to rc- aistallsttacksgainl- us: lbs-how friendship to all nations, favcx to ntma, enmity to none. These are our Articla of Faith. our Tbsta- ment. of Peace. This is the policy of apluidid isolat-iota-lnndon Daily Express. The Now York Herald-Tribune says 1dr. Chamberlain's bucket is "a reminder that a nation can adhere to time-tested fiscal practices and still attain s substantial meuure of recovery.” ‘Ibis is contrasted with the United fiates problem of “try- ing desperately and vainly to spend billions of dollars that an unprec- edentedly lavish Congress has vot- ed" while the British chancellor is busy "allocazzkrg the prospective benefits of increasing receipts dur- ing the next twelve months." ‘Hie tremendous gain made in the warfare on diphtheria 1s illustrat- ed by the fact that thirty deaths are now regarded as excessive, whereas in the l0 years before im- munization campaigns got under way in 1929 the average number of deaths in a year was 750. But 30 is still high after it. has been dem- onstrated that. there would be none if a1‘. children above nine months or age received immunity treatmenl The treatment itself has been sim- plrfied. At first three injections of toxin-antl-wxln were required; now immunity can be obtained after one injection of the new toxoid-New York Sun. The present. generation has ex- perienced more thrills than any be- fore, probably. Movies and talk- ies, the telephone, electric lights and electrical equipment of all sorts airplanes and the radio, all have come in our lifetime. The children of today accept all these things as a commonplace. They simply am an ordinary part of their world. Will they, in turn, be able to ex- claim over as marry marvels and miracles in the next 40 or 50 years? Christian Science Monitor: “If we could get. rid of the approximately 100 men responsible for wars in this world. the people would enicy peace." when Henry Ford made this remark the other day he was referring to the munitions makers. And he was, of course, over-simpli- fying. The case against the anna- merrts inter-abs is too complex to state in s few words. But it is sl- so too complex to be grasped quick- ly by persons who have not given serious study to the conditions on which arms peddlers thrive and to which they contribute certain dsn- gerous elements. Someone, there- fore. has to be willing to put it as Mr. Ford has: “The people in gen- eral don't want war, but lt. has been forced on them by scheming munition makers looking for enor- mous profits through the sale of arms." One of the panels from flu- us" front ‘The Adoration of the lamb." inn- ans-sans; £1 IIAIT DIBIAII IOEI TIAN DOUIIJD 1N IO YIAII fn i000, heart. disease was fourth among the causes cf death and tu- berculosis was third. In 1900 heart disease stood first and tuberculosis stood sixth figures show that in 30 years tbs death rate from heart disease more than doubled while death from other causes either in- decreased by s. small The cause of the deaths in heart disease was rheumatiln in 2'! per cent, high blood measure in per cent, acute infections (other than rheumatism) hardening of the arteries is 9 per ‘cent. thyroid trouble in 4 per cent. congenital (born with it) in over I per cent, and other causes made up The leading cause of heart dis- ease under the age of 20 was rheu- matic infection. "As a matter of fact, it. is generally believed that over 90 per cent of all cases of heart individuals under the age of 20, have rheumatic fever as At 40 to 60 years, hardening the arteries, which of course, causes pressure because the elasticity has gone out of the walls of the blood vessels, stands first as a cause of heart disease. If then rheumatism is the main death in some, and a. the heart in many sters, certainly every means of pre- venting rheumatism should be used. In sorneclties then are "heart." centres where parents and child- ren can learn how to protect and gradually strengthen s heart dams- ged by rheutanrlsur. This ls an ex- cellent work and means much the happiness and effectiveness of However our- first thought should be the prevention of rheumatism. That infected tonsils are very often the cause of rheumatism is now be- yond all question. This doemt mean that all tonsils should be removed and thus no rheumatism and therefore no heart. The tonsils have s uses in the body and should be re- moved only when they are poison- ing the system or obstructing the breathing. If sore throats are fre- quent the tonsils should be remov- Societies for the prevention rheumatism have found that wet. clothes. darrvp houses, severe chill- ins. too much starchy food and not enough meat and e588. an also fac.. The Country Mill (The Spectator, Londom Time was when parish had its mill. 'l‘he mills are store-houses or turned ldlnmfl- Only a few are working now. Up to the war, snoocssional is how brought. about. It is largely duc to Britain's departure frmn free trade. Without customs duties on inrport- ed goods the Mother Country could not. have given the products of Canada and the other hnpiro Do- minions and Colonies s preference over those of foreign countries, a: provided in the Ottawa trade agreements. Prom these duties several hundred million dollars were derived in the fiscal year end- ed ufiffl March, in CXOCcS of the revenue derived from this source in previous years, and this is what convened fie deficit into a. surp- lus. But aside from this, few Canad- ians have givefl much consideration to the burden of taxation borne for years, without much complaint by the British taxpayer. The great- er part. of Bfltains national rev- enue rs derived from the income tax, which has L9"? 2C» per cent. and has applied in recent. years to incomes as low as ton dollars a week. -1n his budget. the Chancellor announced a reduction in the in- come tax to 22 l-2 per cent, which rs four or five times the rate in Canada, Under the new rate a mar- ried man with an income of 500 pounds, or $2.500 a year. will pay an income tax of 4'7 pounds. or $235 in our currency. while the tax in Canada would be about $60. Ancient Systems (Butterfleld in Vancouver Province) Our- friend, Brother Woodsworth of Winnlgeg, reformer extraordin- ary to Hrs Majesty, and leader of the mixed philosophy known as the C. C. F, has unbosomed himself st. a banquet in Toronto upon tlhe high destiny that. awaits his party in the history of Canada. The main idea seems to be that. neither he nor his followers will make any compromise whatever with the existing forces of evil in the shape of established parties in politics. lie will have the whole cheese or nothing. That is, of course an honorable ambition. He has th- cided to go forward. It is his confirmed belief that. there must be a new system with- out any compromise with the old. It. is worth his attention, however, that all old systems can not bc-or should they ire-scrapped suddenly. It. is aLao worth his attention that. a strict adherence to all the older principles of government. in Britain has placed that. great country in a leading position in what progress the would has node toward reco- very. Let Mr. Woodswortifr read the facts from England—lf he can take time off fronr fomenting dreams- and find out. for himself that there are now more men employed in England than there have been for many years; that she has a very comfortable surplus; that her trade revival is most. impressive and that. altogether she has no need to in- m a Bin-A few days ago you vmtilr- sd to comment on a Ilcvs looflsab alarm at "the ° surabar d feeble-minded". ’ a III Br A ‘ exchange interpreted as an explanation of the vote at the lsat provincial election. This is a variation from the usual flattery employed by wily politicians when angling for votes. It is usually “this fine intelligent audience whom I have the honor of addressing." More usually it is hesitation to meet issues facfte face, and to deal fairly with fact; for fear of treading on com; political corns. A long experience convinces ma that. pusrlanlmity in defense rarely fails to produce disaster. It. is true that. an opposition, without responsibility, has the ad- vantage of operating slime pits and slinging mud which the party in power, with the responsibilities of government, cannot lose self respect by wasting good powder to refute. Yet there is a duty of the press, and those behind the government to kcep within limits the unprin- cipled propngandist who to gain political ends will sacrifice every interest. of his country. f admit myself Conservative, but not. so steeped in party as not to be able to view political issues with a judicial mind. Arid I have only disgust fou- the gyration; of those who change tactics with every wind, and whose policies are as "unstable as water.’ And perhaps some further dsgust. that Conserv- atives let. them get away with it. I would like some one, Liberal or Conservative, to recall from the history of Canada. an instance in which the Liberal Party ever irn- plemented an important platform pledge, or performed when in power their promises while in opposition. They fiddled on the strings of free trade, under various forms and alias captions such as Tariff for Revenue, Unrestricted Reciprocity, Free Trade as they have it. in England, changing the form as frequently as they changed their leaders When they assumed power under Laurier they measured as great s distance as hades from Heaven from the policies preached, and left power with a higher aver- age duty than when they took of- lice. In opposition they denounced in vicious attack; the building of the Canada Pacific Railway by Sir John A. McDonald. at s cost of $33,000,000, charging extravagance and corruption. They were not long in power however before they sad- dled Canada with that, unwgntgd Transcontinental, st. a cost of over with extravagance and charged corruptions to stagger con- ception. It. is this great and un- manageable white elephant, im- P0594 0n Us by Liberals, that is now swamping the country w m; verge of financial ruin. They reached economy with heroic persistence when in oppo- sition, but when the reins of gov- ernment were entrusted to them, on several occasions. rampant ex- til! ice became the order of the fill’. and debts mounted skyward with which Conservatives coming inlo power had to exercise their For Full Strong? sad Fias Flavor ~ as BRAKIN GRANGE PEKOE TEA Ceylon . Small To llyatllrsn h Co. Limited, lam Ml, Charlottetown. B30007‘!!! Your Automobile- Is s Great Liability-l Any day it might do dan- ggs to life or property which would ma“ I severe financial burden for you. Why not shift this liability to an insurance company? pm. full particulars of automobile insurance. use the coupon or telephone 67 or 1001. COUPON - OII- 19 model all wish information concerning the following h1g1": raw uni-mm immoral-ram 1 Colllslonl 1 Iire[ ] Assorted Grades Prices on Application- CEDAR SHINGLES We have just bought l4 CARLOADS CEDAR SHINGLES —Cont.air\ing 2V; Millions- From Very Best. Makers L. M. POOLE & CO. PAOLTB WHAIVIS spectra of power. seekers, and the Legislature work- "Tangible and intangible," the coal mines infested with strikes, the spectre of unemployment still stalking over the community, saved only by the relief and corrective measures of the Federal Govern- ment. and the enterprise of the housu of industry which they so busily denounced. With this record those deceived. the resl balance of Power, are only awaiting opportun- lty to rectify the mistake they made when they elected s Liberal promise breaking party. I have much more to recall, but long letters are not welcome to either editors or readers and hope to continue this subject later. l am. Sir. etc. m; overtime with taxation bills, P“ its wake the tragic during the pa~ vides an all-su duce the cost. of odds. later menace of an of the people, and to banish the the fiscal collapse that hit 111g .. Drtssion from their kets after the Great War, and » impoverished homes. It was not a arms psrleys which have .. case of “fecble-minded" but. of all sorts of up-and-down honest men, out of work, and be- since the Geneva deliberation; lieving the smooth oratory of Lib- gan still remain in the 3n .l\ eral spell-binders, even though the plllht skin to process was ‘flgping qt, gen", the currency exchanges. Yet, -~ with their unbounded plgdgg 9f this deplorable stale of affairs l work and better times, accepted w itself painfully won the the delusion and elected them to ‘mum °t ‘u “Elam” and " vers, it does not rn the least. t But now the reaction. Economy “i” “Fm” l)” “'3'”: “m” c”; ldmg. w,“ "M" demonlxb merits of the disarmament - itself. And it. should be rem H‘ ed w mm“ ‘he horde‘ M om“ ed that a war which cost the ers and left the dislocation train cf ills which nations have been --‘ L fifteen yer-n. ~ mcrent. argument the continuance of efforts t0 arms, all - the League representatives ‘ their policies again-Ft 1h! h" The dread altematrve and other arms - petition exert its WWW “d ' kades the road to security peace; and the crisis is only more aggravated by 1h? d9?! fact that amid the ccnfllctiflf icies and demands, lhc 5"" leys have taken an oblrlllle ‘ and have develvvtd, contest. for arms 98ml’- °"- i“ lIlWl by ""51!" and Jan Van Eyck. Hem windmill was still grinding barley vent. a new system m a hurry. m‘ “ma” ‘"5 5'01"‘ 1"?’ W“ °l' “UBNM Oats. By now they If England can do that, Canada ""1813 ""4 '0 W¢Y°°m°~ - ngflgn ggainst, each-and ill“- from the Cathedral of st. Bevan‘! must. all have been given up. Here can also, and without a new sys- Th“ W“ m m," 500"“ l‘ 5'1"! st s wot none of them rm » . a ,f.e"="i-t'1‘h= zgfbsrv ls regarded and there s vim-mm m ‘up tern. Indeed. 1r m. Woodsworth played a. a trump card m bait. m. All‘!!! P8110)’ Muddle m“, C... be donc ufldfl’ '~ m“ w“ °m1 event in tho rnaki flou . but of u» r will not. com . he may poasi- electorate in other pm; r c nsds. m r ‘rho l! : M member for Second 90¢!“- ln order to reduce the sugar tax. art world since the theft of Leon- that ‘hive SJIWVOG at}: greater pa: bly find that other parties will Why are Conservatives :0 sl‘ow in fig; mxnde, "Eonstdgntlgn. said he had sulflfld "Fm mm" it. was necessary for the Dominion also ds Vincls Mona Lisa from an med only for guiding mgqlm adopt. some of what. is good in his posting the public as to the facts? Th. "m, pm," m m, h weggmlmter, TWP-ii“! film as ihlllflifln‘ m1" ""1 "” Government to make up revenue in 1M1“? in Paris in r911. o‘.d days the country mill was 5-401‘ there is some good 1s there any man cf reasoning come down to the cum ‘L; some new awmc gbd coknow it was being introduc- wme om" w“, and wnnquengly an,“ of dMWFr b bread, life. to the parish. The in them-and weld it to their own power who believesthat the lfc- whether it. is possible to salvage lmint iflbmuo Li N: mired ad a tars time 1m farmers had m -' m", "I W" authormtc roller system of mlll- policies for the swd of the country Donald Ministry 1r 1t now appeal- the wreck of the World Dlssrmg a Rom. m... nus ' l 1° P" w“ 1°14 W‘ ‘m “nm” w“ " h" “W” wlnild out uir; r -—a.nd without consultirr m. ed m the le wo ' <1 lialv m g “mo,” of n, 1118f!!! M DOwe beyond the ol-P- i? DQOD uld not. be wiped merit. Conference Hence it i 1 ‘n N.‘ Imam‘ °' " ed by Finance Minister Rhodes in ‘i n“ * i" Judi" 1" "l! cflm- softy of streams and requiring, mo Woodswmth. out. as completely as the Bell Gov- wonder if the k... mmcemefirtmt): The one how m" "’"“““ 1' rouncsr. STUDENT. word-I. "W "M" °‘ "W" THE GOLD TAX (‘Montreal Gssetter on.» their products heme by speculators and not re- ugh‘ gugnggnt prices for them. Ila bnlleved (this bill would over- smne a number of difficulties which the fauna have to contend with. n. rater-red a» cm rnstrketinl o! aasd potatoes At wcaent. it la irn- pn-lbre to cartrol vow in w"- patlum with other pot-aw produc- lag provinces. Under mu bill. the mflnun wovineisl boards could I! together and u-ranse a vim baled gmfl-gprlcecf thellsinestock. good ‘fii-‘tm. his budget speech. Cmrrmentirfl on the Opposition protest against this tax, the Toronto Telegram says: “The gold mining industry has rolled through the depression in the softly upholstered seats of its pro- flt-taking limousine. Now that it. is asked to help carry more of the load of the national exchequer, it puts up a yowl as though the seat. were out of its pants and its feet were blistered through hitting the hard-times turnpike. “The gold industry is the one business which has confirmed to make good profits throughout the depression. The thing moat. to be criticized about. the next tax is that. it. was not put. on two years or Ice ago. "It is diillcult for those persons and tndustris whohsvsborrieflra heatsndbnrntoftludaytework up sgreatdealofalarmoverthe alleged tragedy ofagoldtsxwhlch doeunotccmaintoeflactuntilgold aeliaformorethanasoanouncs. The nqestion that gold dcvslop- ment inthecountry will suffer "in- calculable loss” through a fax of thiskind iamarsly anaxamolscf "It fswith taaas as wflisorss stsaarfonnsoflagialatiss-afllorcgus fsrfsltfinhaltndrswwtttrgocd - w.» inal courts tend to be too long, wr- bosc. and technical in their instruc- "W" W "If Jury: that. sometimes. far from analyzing the “menu cklrly. thry make if, even more con- 1115\nd. so that "twelve good man and true" file out for their delib_ erations befogged sq to ma N‘; points at issue in the case. m n- 11m"- l M“ practice act n» N"! Ill-Med for the express purpose of abolishing this fault, and it h“ attracted much attention among the legal fraternity. The first in. terpretatlon of it was given by the fudge sittinl alt. the recent trial of the ‘Ibuhy kidnapping gun‘ m- stead of addressing the jurymgn "lily. he had his char-p printed, and each of tbem was provided with a copy lo study after retiring to settle "Don a verdict-Ix. Herald-The elsin is of- ten advanced that if Canada would lowsrnertsrifllshewotridtnsble to sell more of her farm product ‘ There is absolutely no m. such a conclusion. a heavy capital outlay and ample labour supply, took the drilling in- dustrvy to the large towns. Then. a. few year-a. cheap ocean transport and the building of rsil- ways from the cost. into the middle of Amery-q, and of Rusds brought about. a further migration of the milling industry from the towm notably Liverpool and Hull. importation of cheap laying down the centre and west of Big/land to pass. Every circumstance corn- bined. some fiflry rulrr the snail mill. And for the rmst part, circumtarwe had its At the present moment. unex- A Poetl-l-le hath put his heart. to school, Nor darcs to move unpropped upon the staff Which Art. hath lodged within his hand-must. laugh By prooempt only, and shed tears by Thy an be Nature; the live current uaff Q . And let. the groveller lip l-ua gt“- nant. pool, In faa: that else, grave and cool lave killed him, Boom mould write his epitaph. Bow does the Meadow-flower its bloom unmldf Because the lovely lime flower is when Critic mo Downteitarootnandlnthatfrea. dcfrcbold: Andsothen ofthahrest- taps. Ocnusnotlwcasttrigkiaformsl mould. lutn-wllowadivinevltslity. -Wi1iismWordswortb. ii!i|l|)~"- ET emrnent in thig Province was wiped out under like conditions? How and on what platform was the Nova Bcotia Government elect- ed? Exactly on the same pmpq. ganda as our Bell Government was elected. Our Liberal Gdve-mmam Plfidlcd themselves to economies m‘! “m the “unify Without in- crease of taxation, and to bum“ accoun‘ with s positive saving and lll-Fblus of 825.000. When elected "I07. Liberal-like. flung their pa]. 16y l-nd promises to the wind, doubled up the whole taxes of the people. taxing everything “Tum- lble and intanglsle," and * of this rwrfldv. the electors snug. ed them under as soon sa the e1. flit-ions were called. The Nova Bcotia. Liberals rod; ""0 Dflwer on s like platform. They Pmlnl-led without taxation and by Mmmy to save hundreds of mW-"mll- W lllhten the burdens FOUND SIIIT 0|! lillST OI Olilll FOIIILII conversations now held in London between Mussolini! summary, Sig- nor lfirlvio Suvich, and the auth- orities at Downing Street evoke but a languid interest. These ncr- otiatiorrs have become stale rrtctt- nls of hope deferred which msketh the hes-rt sick. And if the plain truth bs told it. is manifest that those who have engaged themselv- es in this effort», courageous and effect such an l1 tween the maim’ resumption arr-lent Conference date. A party of W“ laudable as it is. are enveloped in pression and uncertainty that their own confidence in any successful issue has shrunken almost. to van- ishing point. On all hands it is recognised that. there is not. as matters now stand, the ghost of a chance of implementing the orig- inal draft. of the prospectus issued. The assets of the League have suf- ‘lfilllsll.’ so murky an atmosphere of de- Wligelfimd we ‘mm m told shown over the lies Richard tlw ndrrstandllll; Europran " to keen the -' at. w“? l ____’___ risis W?" cathedral I‘ second. 1" churchyard outsldc W“ M"? of Scots. also "w" d And who. h! dflmmd“ above an unllllfk ed ilafiwi" do you think u lvlnv i"? Well, answered ist, I don't. know a nmrbl’ ‘ fered a slump comparable only to have my l"¥l>\°“{“" Beg/la feeding year fox pupa with IMPERIAL PUPPY Ioon sad prays tbs truth of m. well- I hows adage as well as amsrisg pupa of nor- I m. mm. ma» development- Yw do“ ‘ I"! ills is nature late highest elaas outstanl- \ a; m; nu so. caa readily l» m"- i pluses by liberal sad rsgaisr inch-I t‘ o. ml " * “tumors-seawater.