' //" l ., fol/lily," s. e \ i‘ lb‘, O //>t for 4D nears the Worl 's Christmas " g a ' $®fiawfla “beO6QO00009-009-0444-904406000064004-09-000046-00-0046- WATERMANS PENS are sold by E. A. FOSTER CENTRAL DRUGSTORE. CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E- I- an e v o e o ooo-o-o ovwm-o o e+o++o¢+¢e+++v+4 0440"‘ ***° moo vwvw-oeoowwaw e+++e++o+++ve+wwo4++o 0++4 g WE HAVE SPECIAL CHRISTMAS SETS IN e WATERMANS PENS AND PENCILS “G. H. TAYLOR Jeweller and Engraver 121 Grimm street moo e ++o++o++n~e+~+e omo++Qw+e+eHH+H+H ““ ver Is Best IN FOOTWEAR IS FOUND AT GAOFF’5 Save your money by buying 091'“ and getting useful and accept- able Xmas Gifts. Holeproof Silk Hoee from $1.00 to ...................... .. $3.50 $1.50 $3.50 Wool Hoae from 60c to ..................... Slipper: for men, women and children 75c to Hockey Boote (we have some beauties) Boots and Shoes from a few cents to .. . $13-50 Overahoee from a chlld‘e 52-50 to Wins, Flash $6.00 Galtere 75c to 03.35 (our $1.85 le b at value) Men'a Bpata ...... .............. .. Moccaalm in preat variety. Felt Boorba for men, women and children. . Rubber-e, Dominion Brand, the old reliable, "beet" for many years and the Amee Holden. W!" i0"! and teated and pronounced good by the public. Rhino. made by a new firm etartinq under favour- able clrcumatancee. ' Get Overeiloew-Galtera, Rubbere, otc., from u; for we can aerve you beet from the iergeet well ae- aorted atook in the Province. our prloee are ioweet for we meet all quotatlona made by any atore eo our patrone oan aiwaya feel eafe. aorr silos, tn. $1.50 await The Horse Industry dustry during the last ten years ollovrs a very considerable change in breeding conditions, also, but to a lesser extent, in the types of horse population of Canada. For a oil that of any other province; in fact it was almost one-third of the horse population of Ontario, exceed- nunlbor of years previous to the outbreak of War, as high as 10,000 horses a year were shipped to the Western Provinces. Amongst this number were to be found good and dumping ground for what Ontario did not want. The prices, however, sidcred. The speaker has a vivid ronlculberonce of once seeing a pair horse wanted. Ten yours ago, the tllat \_v.ore shown Ill Southern Saskatchewan as the best buy in tho carload, the price being Three llundrixil Dollars. Alftcr lookiilllg them over, one of the party, who was an Ontario lllan, sllid “Yes, they were a good team once. My neighbour brod tllcnl. Ollo is twenty-two and the other twenty- tllroo." lluntirctis of such went out ill the ton or twolvo years previous to 1014, while beavers und real-om DQ031119 sound horses once they ggi, as far Wcst as Regina. Now tho tide has set in tho (llhor way. in 1923, 10,000 horses came through Winnipeg on their way East.‘ Half of these stayed in dur- illg tho first nine months ot’ tho present your 11,500 horses wcro sent lfia-stwartl of wllicll practically Ilulf stayed ilr Ontario tho real; being distributnl through Quebec and lilo th Maritime Provinces. Itcccntly col:- sitlel-ablo colll-plaillt was ulado by till Ontario luau. One of tho florist-t; ho bought was an outlaw llud tho lull-so but“: quiot, tho prico paid was rc-llliy low for lilo sizo uu-l uuuiily of thl- auinlul. llo\l's\'or, win-n tho pcntlonluukl attcniioll was dlnllvn to Illo fuct that lilt- slum was now on lilo other foot. ll > promptly rzlid “Ncvur llllnd zlbllni lilo p-lsl, or wllul w" soul. Illi‘ \\'-'r.t- orlu- , tllc-‘qucslion and point is what. zlro they sending us." Just unlltol" cuso of “wllosp ox is gtlrr-il.“ Sumo of our Eastern nlon IltlVl‘ rccl-lltiy thought SIHIIUIIIIIIK should bu dono to prohibit lllli tsllipping of so lllally inferior Western horo- l-s illto tho- Eustcrn Provinces, fol‘- Rwttillu that this is a frco llrilisll Country, and lllnt tllcso horses would l.llt be sllippod, if thorn wllro‘ not sumo dcmilntl for thonl. Now, it‘ tlloro is a Illcllltlllil, how (loos All investigation of the horse in- ' I bad. young and old, sound and un- sound. in fact the West was the ,- which were pa-id for these animals ' ' were exceedingly high, quality cou- » ‘ it tfilllll: about and who is to blzlulle, tho wl-stl-rll lllnu who ships blast, ,:lnd t-wkls tho chancc of gutting [noun-tiling for hits surplus llorscs, ifor tho lfizlutcrlljlilwctlclx‘ who llnvo lllrcn lying down on til ' job, u lit. \\'\‘l't', ilurlllg tho last Liil yours‘, ‘.lIlllS ulllking it noccsszlry to ill Iport hunscs lo supply tlll- dclllnnti ;\\'ll‘.u it ii.- ruuluulbcrcd tilut l. -> illoi tutu-so popuiulitln of Ontario ill lllltl ‘past ton yours has droppod lll)\\".ll'kl.\‘ ‘of 200,000 llc-dd, the quo" ion of the Ill-cod of bringing ill llorsos its road- =ily apparent, for Ontario, ill addi- Ititln to iulviug no surplus of any no. lcollt to ‘export has cczlsod to brccll enough horses to supply her own ldcnluutl- A survey of tho zlvcrllgz- lftlfllls will find that thp majority (7l"lII't."I.'t\i‘llI IIOIHCS lt-rlrupin years, and that lllolu: is a distinct lack of young onus coining on to takc their placts. During tllo lust twn _vozlrs of illc Will", and tho following two or tllrc - lllllll)’ thought tllnt tho truck and tho lrnctol" wore going to pruclio‘ ully displace lilo horse. not only il; tho citios, but on tho farms. llow- cvor, it bus since boell provon that while it was possible to not‘ truc- tors whcn war prices proruiicll, it is ii vory difforollt story uudcr pro- s conditions. Tho necessity of utilizing tho cheapest form of pow- er is ullplotlsantiy apparent to our fu-rlnors today. This powor is ull- questiollably supplied by the horse. Ontario might well, with profit to herself, breed her own holscs for drnft work. She might also well profitably brood another typo of horsc, for which there is u good ex- port llonlond. Tho various typos of horse ill do- lllnnd- today may be roughly given as follows lluuvy Draft, Sildd-iors ulul Hunters. By Heavy Draft is nloant, horses weighing upwards of llilli) pounds, and particularly ovor 180i) pounds those are wanted for city dray work. A sonlelvllut llglltcl- dra-fter lnay be used on the farms, bllt enough of these will be lsocurcd when attempting to breed lzood big ones. There are also llorscs wan-ted for lumber null lllinc lvork. Those whiio not required to I10 of oxtronlc draft weight should bo thick sot, strongly llllilt, llnd capalllle of standing llnrtl work. A survey of the country allows that there is a scarcity of tho big luau olnlilty Drafter. Recently 1hr Manage." llt‘ ono nf Canada's big cnrtugu colllpilzllts Wllutctl to scours n six horse toum. Before ho secured thclll, his scouts had been .- IEBPIIIG WILLiAn IR Tlhlfl (a va|atahle aserlent) taken at night will he eap you wall, by toning and atrangthanlnl your dl- gestion and alllnlnatlon. 8 pa JIlIlllOIl-Llttla me lily talking tho lust ‘one-ems “II "lull! 4m Made of the aame I redlante, then candy For e Illrln and adulta. COLD IV YOIII XUOOICT <1 - BAKE Your "own- BREAD WITH Ufiestandard of Qawliév » fézfoveraqjearsj - - over at toast thrro Provinces and ovoll thou lit‘ was not zlblo to secure tho sizc and quality that he would have liked to obtain. Tho tiulo has now collie when Ontario breeders, ill their owll intereshs l-rhould take stock of the situation. On the ono hand they cannot afford to breed tho llon-doscript typo 0f any class, while just as surely on tho other hand, they cannot uftord without financial loss to thulnsclvos . no-t to llrccrd tho horsolstrcqllirell to do their own work. both on tho thrills, und in tho cities, unless they are prcjlurotl to pay out con- s-idcrzlblo to supply their own needs and ill- thu Silllli‘ tiulo loso that city t-rzldo, which his hcrotoforc been a profltzlbi-v ono. Draft burst-s will pay tlloil" way nicer the second l' unll cull be lnruod off as lollg s, or win-n fivc yours old. lly IltWIlIIllL at coll. or two conlinf-l for- \\iil‘tl ycurly, llloy will not only supply llll-ir own hoods. but its ill u podtlon tll lllako a fail‘ profit if tilcy l\l't‘ ill-ruling alright. TIL.‘ Ellrittill’ llIHJQtIUTS can no lollgcr afford to uso any llllt Stali- ions possessing size, good coll- [OTlllu-lllllll, quality, and action, ullil [llill uro itcpt ill propcr condition. Ol; tho oillor hand lilo uluros usod, should be young. sound, of tllir sizl- und wl-ll t:lll.ll ($11M! of, while, lilo colts, if sucltcss is to bt- zlclliov- rd, ulll-=t llc g‘ u llll propor curc froul filo limo. \\'Ill‘lt fouled, until fllll grown. .-\ll old tll'i\'<-l' on zln Uutul it) truck, at till.- cud of :1 scvull hunt rut-o, \\'llIL'Il Itilil bmn hotly l'i)lll(.~1lf‘il. and wilich ho "had won, I.Ill'\'li heats, lll “'l‘llo lltll‘. hull it ’ lug nlotll-' ' dud Ill" w ‘g ulll foil.” llv -tll-'u added, “l lli-vc yct uuw a rczll rnco horse, that. will: not glaiu- foil, nlld illill dill not. ilzlvo ll l" cing lllfillll'l'»" \\'ll:lt h; it'll‘ ill lllt‘ i: - of lilo light llorso is also truc in the Ute-ii) of lllL‘ llouvy llo.. lf tllo twt lI"\'iIU])lll\‘Il[ l,~. to llc st tilt. colts nord to bu grain foil, and willlo it is illlporillnt to hnvo lzoud sirm, it is at iozlstliuually lIlipO!" i:llli it. have good sound young llllllhtls that ur.» ill (Ifllltllilull wllcu broil, and kcpt tllut only lilrlllllzllzlul tho wholo gestation pt-r. ioll, 'i‘llous:lluis 0t‘ our lllltliWilZdfl (Ifllll bonds would lluvo boon from two llundl.d pounds lllllVilftlli lll‘.l\'il‘l' lllilll lllvy arc luld thoy lll-‘lilliflllfii and lliUll‘ progxlllittlrls il.~l;u proporiy fJd illILl cu :d ill". I7l.l'tlill.: and fcclliug alrc oquully Ii.‘;'ll.'llll, 'l‘lloy go f;gcltl:l' to l! i-ltl‘ for success lll lilo light lltlfliu world, tlloro is ll stoudlly growing dolnllntl for good big slllldlors und lluuittrs. 1910i! yvl‘ surti u fo\v nlor: illll (flubs stzlrtcil, and nnlny uloro rid- ing clubs como illto existence. it is not uucolnnlun to hear that a cer- tuiu city, ilas a llulllbor of ridlllg clubs. with nroulbc-rs-llip in the thousands, Noithor is ituncolnlllou to hour of a riding cillb being slarL cd ill a littlc town. To product; tho typo of lIOIISO required. 'l‘horough- broil blood nlust be used A goof 'l‘hol"oughbrcd Stallion of the Cruss Country Hllntcl- typo, standing ill [lip Il‘t‘-Ij{lll)Oill'llOO(I of 16 hmnds with 81,1; or bcttcl- of ilono below tllc itnoe, and woigiling upwards of 1200 pounds hint-rd to the ordinary nlaros of tho country, providing Sttllit! have clean cllt heads, good shoulders, clean cut hooks, pro- perly piucod, logs with normal ftei. will produce a high percentage oi tho typo rcuulrtld. Tho balance ro suitublo for light Dolivory, Firo Polico, ltonlount and Farnl work. Al: the prtuivnt l.ln'lo tllnro is- a scur- city of Delivery horses of this typo, wllilo horses for til-s various‘ other classes llulncd are hard lto got. ‘Plloro is all export trod-c at good llritcos for llli tho good baddlcm and lluntors that can ble bred, us- llli-t tho suitable Tlloroughilrod Stallions in slight at tho prosullt time. At tile recent Royal Winter Fair. Toronto. the owner of thlc \VIllnor ill ono of tile classes, refused $1,500. for tho colt. Ho. also won scvorul other firsts. with colts siulilnrliy broil. Now the sire was ll good bilg Thoroughbred of the typo above described, wltlio the danl was just an ordinary mare, such as may be mot with in almost any country dis. trict. Thea-e colts Wore sired and rais- cd in the ltotldick Luke District of the (latlueau region, Quebec, about 75 nliles duo North of Ottawa. Many houses froln this ifITED have found thleir way into various cities of‘ the United Statcs, where they have given nu excellent account of llIlClIlS0l\’C.i. in this District. Thoroughbred Stallions have been standing for service for the last ton or eight years, alld now that the district has become known as n breeding center, oil available colts are being picked up at fair prices. The Alisa Craig Section of On- tario is another district where Thoroughbred blood has been in- evllloncs for mnny years, and where all Ssddlors and Hunters produced have been purchased‘ at good prices, to go into the United States. in fact, many orders have remained unfilled, owing to till. do- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN . Government contract bears witness - ‘complete confidence in the project. , Last summer, the Labor Govern- l‘ pioto TRADE Ann communes AWeekiy Letter from London (From a Special Correspondent.) London, 5th December. 1924. Since the Imperial Conference in 1911 approved of the Imperial Wireless Chain scheme, we have had cigbt Postltlastcrs-Gcnoral ill England. Sir William Mitchell- Thompson is the ni-nth and it fa up to him to put this thirteon-year-old project into effect. Mr. Vernon Hartsllorn, who occupied the ofilce under the Labor Government, was . willing to give permission for the erection of short wave directive stations. He provided for the most searching tests and unless the sta- tions proved perfectly efficient the was to pay nothing. The fact that the. Marconi Com- puny was willing to make such a t0 their lnent set up a coulmittoc under Sir .‘ Robe-rt Donald, to advise on how all improved business organization might be set up by the Post Olilco to ensure tho cfilciont manage- ments of state-owned wireless and cablo services. Tho colllmittl-o camc to an end at "the fall of tili- lust Government, just as it wus ready to make ll report, and Sir ltobcrt Donald in a speech to the Empire Press Union stated that llc alld his colleagues on [I19 commit- tee, Sir Alfred Monti, Sir Arthur Balfour. Sir Edwin Stockton und Sir (Yulupbcil Stuart advocated the setting up of a now dcpzlrilllont llll- der tho Postmaster-General to lltliltlll‘ wireless. “To mix up wire- lcss so closely with lilo oitlcr stall- ilizl-d services," he said, “would bo to l-lltel-k its ill-egress and prujlldicl: it llotil scientifically and commor- cizliiy. Tho usual Civil Scrrico "ms l“ that _. ' 3 K | b H" c * $11’ "Hqhud o; ‘vorkmg by nmungs w,“ closely followed on this Ruin, Iltlp ThcWoman o nocka oe, y 1 alne . $20; “u, K00,‘ rm. bush,,.s_,,_ Waiting m, to tho end of October, v lllAi Spirit of iron. by Steele .. . . ticcisitnls on tho slow milrl-h of flit‘ |["‘""h“'q"5 l“ Lmmom as m _"‘“_ ‘ What Shall it Profit a Man. by Joseph Hocking . $1.90 g ulinutos through tho ruis of rout~ 1m‘ m“! h°““‘c°“fl““d S‘, 13mm,‘ "m; The white Monkey. by Gmsworlhy _ _ _ K ‘ _ _ _ _ ‘ __ $230 i inc]woulil]handicap‘uply ll-nttlrprlsll, ,1:‘=,"ff_‘r‘“§1,{,,§§"“‘L,{“{§IT,.1."L“ pftyptll“ Rose of the World. by K. Norris . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $2.00 uni wont it‘ USIIPCH y laucful ill _ ' “' ‘ _‘ " ‘, _ . _, U“, m, m- mu devulophw, Science tlon of tho wool-tl-xtilc lnkullinllll: The Enchanted Hlll, by P. i3. Kync . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $2.00 ,~_~ and t-xpzlnillrlg llusincss 0f wirc- l“ "l" Smms‘ hi“! bu“ ,1‘ l“ nib Timber Wolf, by Gregory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $2.00 loss. 'i‘llllro was nuollllal- rollson 5'0"“ m“ “willy?DU“:r$1_:€0;;_,,::: At the Foot of the Rainbow. by J. B. Hendryx . . . . .. $2.00 for‘ tsuhtillgpllpt at ntow (tlttllllfllllltdltlf ‘ilgoplplfitilrytillqgrul ivlfi] irwol-H \"-—“:\|I\| wedding gongf by 5_ w_ Mumford , _ , _ , , , , _ , , , , , _ ,, $2.00 Illlt or l0 Os llIilS or- icuoru o ‘ ' . '. ', ," . qt pump“ \vircluss4 “rirpluss wusnm but tho llltost returns indicate. tylllfltl Thc inexcusable Lie, by Harold R. Pent . . . . . . .. $1.50 u ulonopoly. it was ill dircct ronl- i"! lmpmvemmlt ha," s“ Mm“, The Gaspards of Pine Croft, by Ralph Connors 31-50 llltitltlll witll CIllllLsl lurgoly Clllll- llilllclill" 80°" "l ‘l °“ “‘ POSTAGE PAID on ANY OF THE ABOVE BOOKS parison with, coulp:llly-ul\'lllitl wirc- loss. llcsides this coulpctitivtl clo- lllcnt, tlloro was ll further dlfforcn- tinting condition that thp other (IIIIS of ltllo linos of communication \\’i']'(‘. not uutlur tho Sillllu control. Ill Illi‘. l‘lI(I, policy ill regard to wilcil -- lllust bo guidcd by Empire collsido tions. it was time that an llllporilli (Joullllulliculions lloartl lworrl, uppoin-lcd with power to nd- lvisl» on illo tiovvltlplllcln‘. of Elnpirc \\'li'l'l4'.'~lt'l. to ill-op ill touch withtlll: lhluliuions and I‘l'.I)l‘l'Sl‘lII. all the ‘IHUTIHIIS couccrllcd in, Empire colll- nlnnil-utions," Tllcrc is no doubt tllzlt tho nuvy ill pllrticlllur, tho tlfllly and tho air fort-c, too, arc _llil'lllpt‘l‘l.‘il by the fnllurc to coul- the wireless (rllain. Tho French lluvo ono and tho Auluri- Wle look‘ to Sir William Mitchell- 1‘llolllson._.to. . remedy _:tl.lc. sprcscnt stato of zlffairs. The Wool Textile Market Tho proscllt interesting position of the wool malrkct is wcll sunllnzlr- ized ill an article appearing ‘in tho lalltost issuo of tllc "Journal" of the Bradford Chum-bur of Commerce. lt is slutod that tho riso ill tho value of fillo wools and tops which followed lllp opening of the Ans- Lrllliall season proved to be too rapid, and it wont lunch too for to receive the sustained support of tllo consuming centres. Higher pricos were puid ill London than at tile various sales in the Common- wealth. lt is quite certain that manufacturers h-avc not nrudo pric- vs for cloth which boar anything llko a rvmunorntivc rolntionsllili vitiler to tile Australian or tho Lon- don basis for wool. Just alt tho time when tho primary markets were showing signs of ‘the top 0i‘ tllo rise having bucn reached, thcro came u disturbing clculent ill Aus- tralia that had u depressing effect on prices, financial stringency. The ilclion of tho hanks ill lvlivving this resulted in improved computi- tioll at tho Australian sales. Effect on Trade The first cifect of the rise ill wool vllluos ill Australlauud Lon- don was to cansc u Bllllft 01' "my" ing at the manufacturing ond. Merchants and mtullors who llud hold buck business bocrluso they rise, placed orders in a hurry ill nland exceeding the supply. Breed- ors in districts WIIOTG this typo of house suits conditions would do well to givo attention to breeding tilcul. The demand has steadily in- creased during the last fivll, or six years, and bids full‘ to COWLIIIIIK‘ for another decade, at least. There is a market for the right typo at pay- ing prices. All interested ill-the improvement of hols-es would do well to immedi- ately write the llorss Division. Livi- Stock Brunch, for booklets nlld ill- forlllatlon regarding Federal As- sistanco Policy to Clllbs tlla/t hire suitable Stallions. Where districts dlecide to organize, and wish for holp the party or parties in chargi- of the organization should write Mr. Duncan Brown, Horse Divis- ion, Livo Stock Branch, Ottawa, Mr. Brown has lately beeur tran- sferred to the Horse Division as District Horse Promoter for tho Province of Ontario, and will be pleased to give his personal help to districts wishing to get startled might. Organization work should the mlolnitha ‘of January February, in order that tho work totaled mu] a ‘suitable stallion hired before the Spring work oolnes on, end the DNGGIIII Ieuoll opens. calls. too. imperial statcsnulnsllip, Bible stories and trade would gain grout odvuu-I ' . . . in the cx- -- -- .. _ tllgo _lrom dlrcct wlroloss comnlll-Yrgrilosl- églllmélrzle of Able“ Scout . n-lcatlons iletwcen the IJOHIIUIOUS.‘ -- wero sceptical about the predicted ' be dons during the slack season of and both woolen and worsteds. They were soon confronted with higher prices in tho United States-— and this made cheap stocks, held spec- ulatively, easier to sell. When till.- chock to the rise in wool took pilot-- it was not long in making an illl- presslon on the Bradford lllllflfl-ll and buyers, with one uci-rlril, ru- s- ed their activities. A lllll Hlllll‘ over the whole trade. EVCITIKIIIY‘ was content with stocks in Iliilltlfll“ contlacts placed. and a policy of, waiting for a clearer vlcw tilt-l wool outlook was resorted to. Top- makers reduced their quotations for fine tops for delivery in the first quarter of 1925. because of the lower prices paid for wool in Aus- tralia, and stock lots appeared on the market in limited quantities at appreciable lower prices than top- m-ukers would accept. Yarns were not so quickly influenced as tops. because they were to begin with relatively cheap, but in mid-Octo- ber there wasp. distinctly easier tendency for all sorts. All tho time there was a greater -confld- ence ‘in the stability of the medium and low crosslmeds than there was ill merinos and lino cross-brads. The insistent demand of actual con- sumers for cheapnoss forced -m:lnu~ factllrcrs to rely as lllucll as pos- Hundrcds of Choice Books to select from at all prices. Books are always appropriate Christmas Gifts. You can get the very Book you want from our well Selected Stock. A Few of the New Books by Popular Authors si-ble on the lower priced raw nlat- , “Red of the Redfieids", by Grace Richmond . . . . . . .. $2.00 crisis. and 0111B Was “gcllnlllflirllllilf The Locked Book, by F. L. Packard .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. szoo tho extraord nary -a vzlnco \vl Ll 230 wok place in the “n” Krados‘ A Empty Hands, by A Stranger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . $ factor which could not be ignored M0518!‘ Revenge» v0)’ c°dY - - - ~ ~ - - - - - - ~ - - -~ - $2 0° was that lvllllst medium and lowPr The ‘lalley of Voices, by George Marsh . . $2.00 crossbrods wore ill. tho cud of Sé-D- The Passionate Guc-shby E. P. Oppenheim . . . . . .. $2.00 lféllfefgf9fgb§gqz“lfinvé“ mlgunlgil; So Big. by Edna Ferber . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. . $2.00 Elaine at the Gate, by W. B. Maxwell . $2.00 basis, nlerlnos and the finer cross- brcds wore froln 130 to 150% denr- Saint MartinsSummer, by Sabatine . . . . . . .. .. $2.00 or than in 1914- Vicklings Rest, by F. F. Williams . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $2.00 . Peacack Feathers, by Bailey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .1. $2.00 watchmg Amerlca The Mine with the iron Door, by H. B. Wright $2.00 What happens in tho Unitcil A Gentleman in Pajamas, by Buck . . . . . . . . . $2.00 $13035 005 0" lmpormm ‘hmmm: After the Verdict, by Robert Hickens . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $2.00 ‘ on tho wool outlook, alld thc ov- wnntrv “h, Min" A Gentleman of Courage, by J. O. Curwood . . . . . . .. $2.00 Ilns been to crcaip, a lrmllurkallll-l demand for noils and wastos-rulr‘ nlng into millions of p0unds— null tho shipments in sllipnlcnls in Scp~ tembor umro a record. Tlloy hull, rout-bod u value or £205.S;'.ll. Al- Ncw Annuals and‘ Other Books for Boy-s and Girls mmmh Stocks "f m“. n,n,,.,.i,,] 1,, Boy's Own Annual bound, illustrated . . . . . . $3.3: Amery-a an, (lecllning, purchascs GIFIS Own Annual hound, illustrated . . . . . $3. in ll\‘f.‘l‘til‘ilfi uulrkilts Il'lVL' ilccn do, , chaflm-box _ _ _ _ , _ , _ _ _ , _ , _ _ , _ _ _ , _ _ , , , _ _ , , , , , , , , , _, $1.65 rpprhd, partly bill-alien. llOllldltSllw, ,_ Young Canada ‘ D _ . _ _ ‘ _ ‘ _ ‘ _ ‘ ‘ _ _ _ ‘ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ‘ ‘ . _ ’ _ _ V ‘ U $200 wnols are sullstilninllly chh-lli" . Herbert Strong's Annual . Mrs. Strangle Annual l.. Blacktcs‘ Boys Annual .. Coliin's Children's Annual Canadian Fairy Tales, by Prof. C. J. McMilia Child's Own. Magazine Chums ‘Sunday Sunshine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . The Chummy Book than foreign wonlsl (duty pnidyand,‘ partlv Illlfffltlfli‘ it was cxllivrlcil lllfll should (ht-rt? he a Rclllllilwfln fl“ vrlfgp} in flit‘ I'l"v"‘9liiIf‘.llt‘fll lGil-ctuln, a Iowcr wool tzlrlfl‘ \\'(il‘llll llc lDlYll-‘I (lllCClI. In consequence of tin-st lcollsllll-nltlons. -aY-l\or11l buying by tho tinitcd Status was dofurrtulun- til after the election. . .- PRIMITIVE MEN hitherto have boon the Straudloop" - ors (shore-runners) whose remains llayodlciatffonud "lrrthe caves at Tzltzkalnll. But below these n scientist claims to have found two skulls which, he said, wore totally different frolll those of ,tbe other human beings that had inhabit- cd the cave. They were fourteen feet holow the surface level’, and -. llc believed them to be remains of a race that had occupied the cavos at a much earlier period than till- time of tho Strandloopers. it was necessary to handle the skulls will the greatest cure. as they wort mouldcriug away. The)’ 0'0"‘ H0" two to three times as thick as tllosl. of the Strandlnopers, and other evidence pointed to their llavim» belonged to a mllch more llrlluillv" race, of a. stature considerably greater than tho Strnnlllnopcrs. llc tiolicvetl them to be closely nlllotl to tho famous Boskop skull. (POSTAGE OR PARCEL POST CHARGES EXTRA) We also have hundreds of suitable books for Xmas Gifts.“ V " Colored Picture Books for little Tots in great variety. Subscriptions Taken Subscriptions taken at publishers prices for all papers and Magazines. Prices furnished on application. Our news counter is kept well supplied with the best Magaz- ines and Newspapers of England and America, Special Discounts to Ciergymen, Sunday Schools and Teachers and low prices to all. Correspondence solicited. MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION Carter 8t 00., Limited “SANTA CLAUS’ H EADQUARTERS" ii ITALY'$ AIR FORCE EFFICIENT Italy's air fol-co has boon built itft-sszlgglzrl) quotes tho llnllcl'~|l'il=l-t that nligllt vonturo ill our up.to a point that gives her ulltor- Secretary as shying: luky." ities confidence 0f he!‘ llllllii-Y t0 ‘Tho “PW arlll orgnnizoll untlcr, Th» hlllssuugxiro oxprcsscs grail». r hold hcr own defensively ill this lhodircct supervision of our loadcr titration that "l cxt October four b‘ _ has today reached an cfficioucyltinlos us nuluy airplanes as last which will pornlit us lIt'Ilt‘.('I'til‘Wlll‘LIlyflftf‘ will participate ill tllc Italian to fzlco all zlttnck frolll lllly utilcrlair lllunocuvres." field of nlilitary activity, it was de~ clared by Under-Secretary of State Accrbo in n speech at Aqultu. Ttlc ‘ A wonderful all-purpose flour” So say thousands of housewives who use Quaker Flour for all their baking. Its even texture and never-varying baking qualities make it the delight of all who use it. trailer flour Alwags the Same-Alwags the Best l Makes larger, whiter loaves; better pastry; lighter cakes. Our expert baker has prepared a. number of recipes for baking bread. We will gladly send them to you. Write to-day-they are FREE. A nrodurt of Tho Quaker Mills, Prior-borough and Saskatoon. I’! may be completed, nil members ob. N. narrzneunv. Sold by all leading retail atoree, LTD" Wholaeale Distributor. Charlottetown.