. JYRF-Tiill PPIQFQJllFlIlEZ °.'~.lli'.¥,°°_ll‘-‘~F1'i°-‘i.. ~ PAGE FOUR ' m: GHARLOTTETOWN aunamin lions THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDI_A_N____ BY THE WAY fg»"len0—“'. (‘heater B. Mr-Lnru, M. P Bcrrefury—-Lleuf.-Col. u. ‘A. lIMKlnnun, u. s. o. b Editor null mini-gin; mn-r-tar-J. R. Ihrrnell. 1'3‘, .\.-.....»l.i|.~ Iliiilniw-lriiiik Wrrlker uml n. h. (nrrle ifiirnin- li.i‘lv lluilnulrll his?) $5110 v" 3'4"" lln mhimcc) delivered. $110!“?! y-Jar in. ll-hilllfl‘) mam-a n. cam-m. nml ruin-u sir-m. AT, DECEMBER 24, 1931 Vlre-Pnnirlent-J. BJ Burnett But for the chuige in govern‘ mcnt in 1930 the Dominion would already have lost some of its major] indusir-‘cs, while uncmploymentl g would have been enormously Q ._ _ greater than it is to-day. The, nyjumuw RGHMLMD courageous, forthright policy in-i flllgurflwd b? ‘he 5mm" ad‘. srvpvmc arruzrsv Dcllbr ‘pi carry on to the utmost of o conviction tha FOR .1 S?! FE IIOLIDJ Y Here are some "Sufi-P: Firstflflliillly. “llll the hints for cilfLiifllllS and Ulc <l1‘.\‘~>' “Md “wk and good cheer Wm see when other countries were trying Cambrrdgeqtlrlnn" where records are r u; tllrvush. l5 111B bfisl fllllldilte 1°‘ to dump their products on the kgpf, o: every epileptic patient every ‘ gloom and the bcst guzvrantee of Canadian market at prices far be- hour or the day and nishtmnd every that follow- Give the clrilclitcii iill ill? they netd and all nut-arm afford ifmd Yfsulty’ brlt buy wise‘y Be sirrc that tiny: tots are no: given »:i~all zr:tic‘vs ma; girl-y can ow or Jihtifc. Lmkvulrg h»;- rrrrs iii ciimigi (lwlls. (‘l t a _\'s FEELING RAN HIGH cach dcfaulting elector being liable to a fine of $10 for failure to cast _, liirllni. nut on the occasion of last l ivo YounlL-icrs ,iu:\s trcc b‘i' huiuilvrL~ of f v:- w \.-'ir l» ~- - P- r“ H W, L. ,.,.; I l. f-‘1"l:.I:i_\"s general clcction feeling thc ‘rt (ll l L .. .,. r.r:i s0 high that it required no mo. .1. .. Q13“; m- crgpe papor for (icctirzit- m" ,,,___,, _ . ..,|,1,. pills. I-"cw of the 3,500,000 register- », i~'- ' “ knrflwlk, , r ,,:,_ (‘(1 \'.'~’."i's ncclcctrd thcir duty. pcr and r- " i.‘ 4 ‘hourd m r, r, r sirlcs, iiidzcntiiig an alert and Whcn ‘. gtup-Iadriwl", W" .r r box. r rscalths welfare. Anybody inclined i» draw parcllcls will note, says the Y. . HOIIIPOCAI Gazette, that, wliilstthe broader aspects of the election were ...iil' (i lhould be disposed of liniriccizazcly. Dispose o; we tree before the 'not unlike those of the British gen- recond my of January as “.119” n,‘ cral election, the Australian Labor has driui out. u r; highly inrlsm-f imrlv defeat mablc. tobcr‘ last, and it was inspired by a‘ like spirit of determination on the“ part of the people to rise above‘ laarty and rescue the country from‘ an administration which threatened to carry the country into bank- ruptcy through its singularly reck- loss and unsound ideas regarding nazional finance. Saturday's verdict, in fact, is hailed in Australia as a definite and decisive condemnation: confidrlrcc, frsc from 1i...’ or the “dangerous financial and the other siuivr-Ollll- banking policy of the latc Govern-f mism, founded on the solidity of menu-- and Mn John Lathanr one! British character and the Illfldfl-S or the leaders of what was the Na] mental strcngth of the country: The {mm-lust parry’ dechrres that as ‘an PYlllTG Lfiiijr-Jcr‘ fllflfl" it plan that h.“ fclt the nation would chic-z‘ the 110w year and fare the future, not", only ivithoirt alarm, but with assur-‘l unco that the cor" cling influences a‘. ivork would iii". the clouds over, "THE BEST ANT/NOTE" Prcmicr BFHIYHYS mi 111,-: at lira‘ eiric luncheon tvizi-"rcd him in To- tho Toronto cdniiorial, dit-r-p mnto last wck Globe. must prcssion 011 ilivsc who heard “His brief. was an cariicst appeal for national‘ inn harp madc a uir- 1L! non-partisan mcssagc, Sill OI‘ i cxtrr uie of immediate outcome of the election,- confidcnce will be restored to pri- vate enterprise. and this will mean! an early improvement in the lfldllSyl trial, conrmcrcial and financial po- siticir of the Commonwealth. l W" the daillgi-l» THE.‘ EXPLANATION l "There was no attcmgit to mini-i. mize the dliTlCllliltlS of the situaw Err“ lime Children may be mys_ tion or the effcct of woxltl condi- ’ {mod by me ommprcsence or sum“ ‘Lions 0n the Dominion, but there Cmui During a visit to the stores “'38 a“ impmng 7mg l“ the Spmk" the Jolly and benevolent old gentle- er‘s reference to the inherent qual- man l5 t0 be Seen m many dmerent lties in pcoplc of Brztish stock mnuldri But mm suggests the ex_ which Sumwum‘ ‘r°“b‘~"5- H“ 590k“ change, is easily accounted for. The of the gratification in Britain ovc-r. Same thing was encountered by the success of the rcccnt Canadian Mark Twrunis famous “Innocents” ma“ as ‘Flliml o7 m“ ‘Pint “I Cm‘ during their journey abroad. when, fldcncc in both countries which m an Ira-mm my y they were “mp-d “'1” m“- shoim the skull of Christopher Co,- “Betng closcr to Canadas diffi- rumbusl more was exposunation m mm“ ma“ ‘my ‘ml’ el-‘Fmmg tho cffcct that this part of the great with thcm ‘ <laily,_..j\ir. Bcirnctlarmvigaror-s anatomy had been seen plight be cxpcctcrl to spunk of ihc‘r,-r_,.vyc“-rrrrr,_ However‘ an doubts were prospects of thc future with con- flqaycd when a resourceful guide riderablc rcsvrvation. Since he is explained that they war? viewing “we m 1°01‘ mhIlk" m“ l“’““i““Y the skull of Columbus when quite a l0 brighter (l.i_v.~, and Ii) rccviiilntind ycrmg ma“ ' this attitude to the Cfliiizzdiaii pco- plc, the leadership given without EDITORIAL ‘VOTES 13-590mm M Igncamqtan dam“- _ a suggestion of puLiiicaI pur-irsan- in the Unitcd Statcs is sending WM“ , ship, is dis-r, run: of lht.rla=li'.frll ac- The first Christmas card of Calmdmn “m” vagauoflst“ w And 21m biztxiljuno “vthpfln ccptancc. eighty years ago was elaborate the west Indies inswad of. to Andxsirliftdof an cld belief. “Appzircut y llir: Prina- Aluilstcfs compared with the more simple izoildgmzndtfiiggufflrlzixgv 12min ‘ visit to England l. {pl-d to ltrrng- vflrd; of to-day. ft is described as rmgm It wflsgmrd ‘Wminadnn Lo! at th's ancient shrine of mor- lh< ii his canflztiilu Ii..-‘ .i'i wnflsl d1 wrrrcil “with a trcllis of rustic whn fefpffpd (o u“. “rrst Indira; as i-"l ‘Fesmlg- _ bc wvll in l'l.l;1iil;l~:i‘ Line. ll. xvork in the rathcr rococco style, "Canada's sun porch." dvhogjnlrgff‘ “Tiemmnng and t? . , l I . found the British pmpir- gynpplhg; .,\-1th a division in the centre, and A mo“ "Mum or We "Sh; and our“, has no; vcith pyfllllfllll’. much Illl rt‘ ,<(.'Ti"li.< two Sidl? panels, the outer panels the Russian problem 1S the hand, sweeter- resting than ljnrrc oi (J IVIrl l u» 11in; rrprcsciiting two acts of charity, 1mg of m9 Jews by the gnvrptg Than ages offer-with the Prince thorn ..i.~<- HWll- ‘ivcdinc the liungfy’ find ‘clothing Held down for centuries by cruel U! Pm“- sliould Cilliill :3 ll 1111- the pour‘; while the centre panel and inhuman lfillllctl°lls and "I-“°Y__P°.F_‘F“d° Clark!“ in the same nativr l fluff‘. czizi i~.~ ‘r: i :.-liL depicted a gay family party, lnclqd- Plohlblicd "m" DWXIUCUVQ 3m‘ December Red and whim?‘ into opcrnimii. iiirfi‘ -h'iul'l ‘zi- doubt about tho nuicniilv." no mg thrcc gcncratiorrs, The Toronto (‘ll my v1..<-li 1.: the appointed charitable acts." lcnding Liberal ll1".‘.'. ililfliT i~i l-ilist- the crn Canada f‘f'lll‘i'lil"$ with the A correspondent In the Ottawa fdlowinl; frank ti". i’) the Prime Journal writes: Minister. investigation into vice in New "Notwitlii-i anrliiz: disagreement with '1 ii‘ Globe's York, ‘the big shoV-among runny’ air ntthis time. His flflfflff$filififll§ is lcadcr in thevprobc. The same little br-yond question. His nppcul for con- “island“ produced a Cabinet Mlnis- ment . “m, purpose {mm day to day minlstrition checked the country’s ______ ' u, crows-r d-Wflhl" "ld- at lea“- One of the most satisfactory iternii your“; 15 compulfiofy i.n Australia, take care of their own loans and went far to stabilize conditons in a o; news ma; h“ coma 10 hang l; t time of the world wide depression that o; the cmgny {or Epfleplcg 5g Early Postal Regulations ("The Rancouteur" in the Mon- I treaf Gazette.) In the eighteenth and earlier part of the nineteenth century the town postman carried a bell, a practice which lasted in London until 1846, and in other places un- tll much later. A public notice 1n 1805 reads: Houses or boxes for receiving letters before four o'clock ‘at the west end of the town and ' five o'clock in the City are open in every part of, the metropolis; af-I fer that hour bellmen collect thel day of the year. For three years such records have been kept con- i’ ceming one hundred patients, and The Bennett Government has now the program r8 m lrrcmde a; 5mm‘ ma‘ can“; "5 “e “bu? w chart of this sort for every epileptic. From these charts it is possible to the'better trade conditions soon trace the regular or rhythmic cyfle will put the Canadian dollar all which many patients follow. It thus flSM- F01‘ The 998115 111011918 01 becomes possible to know when at. the fiscal year ended in November tacks will occur and to do whatever Can divs imports fell from-6G9 t; possible toprevent them. Some millions to 411 millions and the have sclzures only during the day low the cost of production. 'letters during another hour, recel-l ving a fee of one penny for eachi letter..The root idea o! the old system was payment by distance, and on delivery of the posted pac- ket. A single letter between’ Lon- don, Edinburgh, or Glasgow cost ls 3 1-2 d. The average produce of a letter in 1837 was about 7d; Weight was a considerable element in determining the rate, and there is an instance of a package weigh- ing 32 ounces which was sent from rmppulsion to take the people to the balance of trade ls now in favor of and others only at night. Some have with improvement attacks at a certain hour, and in from month to month. The favor- others the time of the attack varies. ’i“ir"r' \‘.'.i,\. extraordinary zeal on all ab,“ balance was ten and 1 - D- Hmrskrns find Gum-re ' ‘ millions in November and more 5 Clillll- l5 ~ ‘ Deal to London and the postage was 6 pounds, four times as much as the charge for an inside place by the coach. This didn't pay; all sorts of dodges were resorted to in Some Massachusetts research phy- has been almost as‘ sir-coping as the one suffcrcd by the Lrrboritcs in Great Britain in 00-! 'mous benefit not only on herself, presumably celebrating after having done their the 0f Mr. investigators-is undoubtedly that BPYWPWS liohtical flllii f‘. ("l1 polic- brilliant young lawyer, Jacob Gould ics, it bclicvcs it to h." th» duiv of‘ Schurman, Jr., whose father came rficflldescencfi 5°!‘ the people in gcncral tn hark 1.1mm: a farm in Prince Edward Ls-lwere a: fnr as possible iii his clidcuvors land, Canada. All the American pa-| than nine millions just over twenty millions. I epileptic attacks. Santa an“ is now just around This bears out the findings of in- ‘the corner and peeping around t0 ea how the boys and girls are fairing he finds to his dismay that some of those expectant children were neglected last year with causing attacks was discovered and he 15 determmed m“ if they some years ago, when an investiga- R" neglected this ye“ it Wm m“ tor was able to prevent attacks 1n a be his fault- He h“ been wmkmg group of patients by simply starving On the mini“ °1' me" ‘md w°m°n them. Not a single attack occurred during the Dafit W0 01' mm? “Mk5 in any of thc group for a period of inspiring lhem t0 855m l“ Pmfld‘ ten days: that is until the food was in; especially for the neglected again g|ven_ _ one of past yer-rs and the prospects Although there seems to be dif- are that no one will be forgotten _fcrcnt kinds of epilepsy, and a dig. during the present season. The fcrcnce in the force or severity of stores are well filled with the the attacks, all kinds and all de- goodsythit children of all ages re- crccs of severity are greatly helped quire ‘or rheu- Chrlsgmas enjoy- by cutting down on the amount of ment and good men and women fluids-water, tea, coffee. milk and are doing their best to provide for $0 forth. v everyone. The word dcprcsrion has A5 Y0" kmlw- mcfeflslllfl the been dmppcd from the regular amount of fats—butter. cream, fat vocabulary and the cry has gone meat-and decreasing the starches- mrth that them is now enough bread potatoes. pies and cakes-is and w spam r There is no reason helpful in a great many cases, but to fear this Christmas 1931 will in “nliztgssteil: gfielrlzallirllll °1' illfiilfll-i ‘my w“ m“ bmmd m“ °f past to lcam l. this intensiflegsitudy x3 years‘ Yepilcpsy, and the opportunity to watch one hundred cases every hour and the severity of the attacks. That the food has something to do An ' tel-national trade is In essence barter, ‘and although m the liter nineteenth century they comparative openness and flexibil- ity of Jshe-{Orclfllk-mfl-Yket-flllflwed ~ this almost to be overlooked, there have since the war been numerous examples of the necd for insisting on it. Such a policy is calculated to restore fair play to the great‘ export trades of this countryq which at present have every sort of obstacle put in their. way by ‘countries which at the same time rely most materially upon selling their own goods to us. ‘Moreover. if Great Britain can use the bargain- ing power which she p- scsscs as a consumer, in ordcr to bring about A“ a lowerng of foreign lrrricrs generally, she will confer cnor- year out. SANCTUARY climor greed? fast to glamour. creed? ii . 7- but on the world at large. Every dreams “My representative Exonomic Confer “p5 we dumb?__ in Ormberx of Palmer, and Dr. Naurison of . a healthy interest in the Common- The total for the two months being sprmgfield' ha“ mun‘! m“ a h“ percentage of water in the bodily tissues is favorable to relief from vestigators. that cutting down on the fluid intake lessens the number of the day and night, year in and . conferring a benefit onyourfriendr order to smuggle letters; "franks" were forged, in spite of the fact that forgery was a capital of- fence, and letters were sent and refused by the addressee although by a prearranged code the mere sight of the wrapping conveyed news as to the health and we1l-be- ing of the sender. In 1837 the rate for a single inland letter was 4d. for 15 miles, 6d. for 30 miles, 7d. for 50 miles. and so on up to ls for each additional hundred miles. Rowland Hill, to whom we owe the penny post, collected evidence and showed by statistics, that the length of a Ietter's journey made no appreciable difference to the cost of that journey. For example, the cost of the mail-coach ser- vice for one journey between Lon- don and Edinburgh was about 5‘ pounds a day. He then worked out the average load of the mail at six hundredweight, the cost of each hundredweight being therefore 16s 8d. Taking the average weight of a letter at a quarter of an ounce, the cost of carriage over the 400 miles was one-thirty-sixth of a penny. Yet the actual postage charge was ls 3 1-2d. One of the first obstacles he met with was the rooted idea that the British public would object to prepayment. it being contrary to their habits and customs. You see, they argued that when you wrote a letter you had all the trouble, and you were who ought to be prepared to pay for it. And sometimes, if you have written a long and interesting let- ter and received in answer a scrap- py half-sheet with no news in it, you have probably felt that our Is there a ca-lm at all in all the Of world-tones lifted in a war of tor at Batrh was the first ma“ 1'5 than; a place when! yvilth holds the carriage of letters d man retains the comfort of a had been forefathers weren't so far wrong after all. John Palmer, a theatre proprie- to propose the use of’ the coach for, and mail; . up to that time the Post Office satisfied with four or five miles an hour. Palmer had to travel about the country himself l5 that‘: a srvcct retreat whcrc old quite often and he pointed out to Pitt that letters should be trans- Whcre fears arc mute and wailing mitted at the same pace as it was possible to travel in a chaise. m” i“ Eump” h” be“ "W"; Whore Hop“ stands waiting with the 2nd of August, 11:14, u... firstl for a long time past that thew barriers ought to be lowered; but no pressure has been applied to bring it about. We have the men: of bringing pressure to bear, and we ought to rise them. uplifted find" they coma? not. shatter: ployment the Jews bxame a vert- _blc blot upon the Russian Gov- swrtzcrlanrr The restrictions of “In the Scabury land “d pmmulcd t” m“? Em" banks of many other countries: ploymen]; in factories. Today, 46.7 and m“; (he countries embarrassed to extricate 5mm?‘ Russ“ a“ wag9"°““‘°r5' 9' themselves, to reduce their own no other nationality debts by rm lncrcflge o; rheu- issue has yet reached. It is a wonderful or paper money. Knowing all this B- llfioplc who they are hastening to convert into downtrodden for centuries. ma] estate, which cannot depreci- but who have once more dirplayed a“ 11kg money, tha money whrch might ‘mt ‘have fixed the “w!” ‘.0 clear tlic. financial and brlsinl-s". pcrs arc referring to him as the tgrafgéongépifiiaecughtffie c3; tzifdpgafi‘ t°fp?:ton?ib"(’3a:;m: tion. Every carrlH-Be on every mom- ' ll - * ling in the year was taken down bankrupfev. It is with people like u, m Omani inspector for exami- and to show themselves, m}; that an upright country like' per cent of the Jewish population may be compelled’ percentage hardships, suffering, and ill-treat- TO my)‘ ‘he mmms of ppm-rm as and the experiment was so success- Ycs; thcrc- is calm that tumult can_ g marvellous crnmcnt. Undcr Soviet manngc- they are not going m pay the“, most famous mcnt iiic Jews ivcre rciicvcd from shortrterm debts next February; start of the old mail coaches from I‘ ccmufles" that grave financial embarras- Thcy have been given grants of mems Wm result for the great ed Bl? 918m P- ill-. and mail coach started from BristoL,‘ ful that a year later coaches were running to all parts of the King- i dom. In 179B, Lord Campbell re-U lates: “I was to perform the Jour- And thcrc is silence for our soul's my by ma“ mach t° Edlllburlh-l and was supposed to travel with ‘r velocity, taking only‘ three nights and two days for the. whole distance from LonclonJButf this speed was thought to be high- ly dangerous to the head, inde-\ pendently of all the perils of an overturn. and stories were told of men and women who, having rea- ‘ ched London with such ceierity, died suddenly of an affection of the brain. My family and friends " were seriously alarmed for me and . advised me at all events to stay a ‘day in York to recruit myself." The fare was 10 pounds from Lon- don to Edinburgh. Germans know De Quincey, of course, wrote the I description of the l; London. In his time they assembl- l their‘ strength. their brilliant cleanliness, ' their beautiful raced off one after another. He says in part: "On any night the spectacle was beautiful. The absolute perfection of all the appointments about the carriages and the harness, simplicity-but more than all, the royal magnm. cence of the horses- were what a. . Wllflflll. B11168. linchpina, ndencc BOP‘ i0 U1"- mot of things. ter under two Presidents in recent when given an equal chance, cap- prance must dcal at Geneva, be- polag glassel. limbs, were all crit- conndence of the people in their years-Hon. Franklin K. Lane; able of the maximum in effort and fore I tribunal composed for the lggfly proved and tested," 1g l; united strcnftth and in the capac- whose Canadian birth was the only‘ Bchlevemmt‘ lty of the country tn nc-ct its bur- thing which prevented him being‘ lens is more t‘ ‘wminowl ‘M the Presidency." .¢|~4U It ls reported that rlch German! fnudlflfl u" purchrsla- r-“e-eur in bmeflii- B moot part of more or less rotten Ljgedy that, lust as they were in bmkefl. who Mo, interested in de- [he pink of their perfection, a ngw Franco for their own for“ w}; £0 WCfk that drive them off the road. would “STRE T SCEN " lA Footnote To History (Mail and Empire‘ Anyinteresting bit of history in jrevealed in the "Life of Robert. Marquess of Salisbury.” written by the late Prime Minister's daughter, Lady Gwendolin Cecil. Like other British Foreign Ministers, 10rd Rosebery attached the highest im- portance to the maintenance of good relations with the United States. but he often 101ml! it l difficult job. The controversy about the seal fisheries in the Behring Sea. gave him an opportun- ity of vindicating the use of secrecy in dIPIOmBW- W339 negotiations were proceeding Preli- A MERRY "fishing Oar Friends and Policyholders / w w . r. v Cunzsmns and A Happy r and Prosperous NEW YEAR HYNDMAN s. 00., LTD. d g” The Oldest Insurance Agency in P. E.I. a dam Harrison published’ m May’ coast of South America as their tirely due to preseEt-QIHEEMBYEE 1889, in the form of a proclamation. orders to United States revenue cutters to proceed to the Behrlns Sea and there to seize any Can- dian vessels found sealing. This could not be tolerated; but, to avoid ,a dangerous eXDIOSlOH 0f popular feeling, absolute secrecy was preserved as to the SW98 WW3‘ Great Britain would take. Sir Julian (Paucefote, British minister in Washington) obtained private information that the orders to give (the President's proclama- tion) effect had been actuilly issued from the American admir- alty. A cipher telegram was at once despatched to the British admiral in command of the China The efficiency of the Post Of fice generally is hardly yet appre- ciated by the general public. Some amusing examples are to be found in such books as Mr. Edward Ben- nett's book on the Post Office and Its Story. After the introduction of the parcel post one of the rules was that living creatures were not to be sent without the Postmaster- General‘: direct sanction, but in the express service by messenger all the way, this was allowed. Dogs on the chain and cats in bas- kets, and other livestock were sent out in charge of express messen- gers. On one occasion a man who had lost his way‘ in London went into a post office, paid the express fee, and asked to be taken to his destination by express post. This was at once arranged. There is a1- so the tale of the special corres- pondent who, being unable to gain admittance into a newspaper of- ficewin Fleet Street, went to the rfientral Telegraph Office, andtel: egraphed to the Irish end of the special telegraph wire worked from the newspaper office in Ire- land, requesting the Irish clerk to tell the Fleet Street clerloto come down and open the door. Just as a warning to people who are sending presents at Christ- mas-tide, I might mention that one Christmas parcel sent by par- cel post in England was found to consist of share stuffed with pac- kets of tea, raisins, candies, rash- ‘ ers of bacon, a briar pipe, a small tooth comb, all wrapped in a. red pocket handkerchief. Another, sent to n hospital, was n flimsy hat-box with the lid secured by tape. From it flowed a. thick, sticky sterani of egg-yolk and albumen. When op- erred, it revealed a silk top-hat. inside which was packed a. damp goose, the spaces between the goose and the lining of the hat being packed with eggs. This par- cel hnd travelled by coach, steam- er and rail via Holyhead to Teedsl squadron; four men-of-war strrted unobtrusively upon a Summer cnrse of undefined duration: a news agency noted their departure. but happily-perhaps not quite spontaneously -announced the ar f i i TIPS Beth Salts .. $1.00. $1.50. $1.15 vmmi’ Cases 75c to $6.00 Perfume 25c to 86.00 Toilet Water- $1.00 to $2.50 Dusting Powder $1.00 to $2.01‘ Ashes of Roses Soap 2 COBB to a Box $1.00 Coir‘: Soap 3 CIR“ lo a Box . . . . . $1.50 Sweet Pea Toilet Water $1.05 Sweet Pea Talcum, Glass Bot. "B $1.00 Yardley‘; Lavender Wat" - ~- 55¢. $1M. $1.50 and 82.50 Molrs Chocolate: 40c to $5.00 - Clum- Clxnretes. Tohaocos. x1"! Wrlimed. THE 2 MAGS rnona m l . 4$Q$§ ,_. destination. A few dlys later they appeared in the Behring Sea, and for the next few weeks patrolled with leisurely aimleamess the scene of Canadian sealing enter- prise. No word on_ either side broke the official silence. The withdrawal of the President's proclarnttion had never been in- vited, and it was never withdrawn: went. were the orders required by it counter-mended. But, in fact, no revenue cutter left American ports that Summer for the Behring iFossil Ice In North (Tim Geograrpichai Joumal) with the SPTBBA of mining and engineering operation: in northern Canada a knowledge of the char- 'acter and extent of its permanent- Qly frozen ground is becoming im- portant. W. A. Johnston brings to- Bether data in an article entitled “Frozen Ground in the Glaciated ‘Parts of Northern Canada," which Imakes reference to papers on the fllbleet Wpearin: 1n the Pfooeed- lngs of the Royal Geographical Society for 1885, 1886 and 1887. The chief regions dealt with‘ are the Yukon, Mackenzie and nothem Manitoba. 1n the Yukon ifmet pene- trates to a great depth, which, how- ever, varies considerably, being greater in the valleys than on the ridges and greater in the unglac- iated Klondike district than in the parts of the Yukon which have been glaciated. In northern Manitoba a good ‘from many borings in connection ‘with the Hudson Bay Railway at ,P0rt Nelson and Churchill. Here practically no frost was found be- ineath the tidal muds, but m one boringdnland frozen ground was ,found at a depth of 115 feet sq)- ‘arated by an unfrozen layer from jan upper layer. Although the depth of the frozen ground is generally lower in the colder northern regions the relat- ion,between it and the mean an- nual temperature of the air is‘ not very close. ‘Phi-is whereas at Daw- son, Yukon, . where the maximum depth of the frozen ground is at least 200 feet, the mean annual temperature is about 23.5 deg. F.; at Norman, in the Mackenzie Val- ley. where the depth is only about forty feet, the mean temperature is only 20 deg. l". 'I‘hia anomaly in- clines the author to infer that the deaf" of information ' Is" Tiiiflibfe“ diflcx. but is an inheritance from the glacial period, though h; m. mite that the Mlekenlte River may have some influence in diminish- ‘ing the depth at Norman. It is evident, however, that a much wider survey is needed be- fore safe inferences can be drawn. Ruffles ilcertainlyknownto ex- riflt 1n Siberia, Finland Ind who! nor, so far as public knowledgepold countries, but it should never be assumed without an emhaustive examination of present-day me- teorolozlcal and hydrological eon. ditious. It has even been argued that the great Velma‘ Jokull 1n fos- lflfld mil-St be l. legacy from thc Ice Age, because that country is warm for its htlhide, regardless of . n» mt that it a 1m um relativo ', warmth which makes Iceland an exremely snowy mnmtry at any al- titude. Ice Cream-An, Ancient Dish (Exchange) - Claims by the Washington bicen- tennial commission that the Washington: of Mount, Vernon, ‘711811118. WEN the first to make for cream in America are supported b; rather flimsy evidence but they will obtain for the forthcoming celebration eonaidemble publicity, which is, after all, the reason for the claims. They are based. on a. memoran- dum in General Washington's handwriting and dated May 11,.‘ lift._sl3s>w19a._th1t_.tia.-had_.n.uz s. .. ‘ chased a “cream machine for mak- ing ice." _ But Marco Polo bfoillht bee! recipes for ices from Japan and China Catherine dc Medici wu very fond of ice cream, and |Vvl11ter Scott wrote in the Talia- rmanofa who! froaen sherbet .881“! by Saladin to Richard the iLion-hearted. In 1774 ioe cream Zwas served in Paris with a coat of 1 arms molded on the portlon m be- ' ifore the Duke do Chartres. mule .XIV. is supposed to have served 1W8 t0 hi5 Bile-fits and recipes for frozen sweets appear in cook books written 150 years ago. Two years after the Washington memorandum there appeared-in a New York known advertisement for ice cream, which casts further doubt on the Warhlnston claim since it was are the custom in the eighteenth century to commercialize somethl great depth at Dawson is not en-l of such recent origin. u _. ITISWHARD TO EQUAL THE FLAVOR ‘I AND AROMA or BRA HMIN TEA ‘ TRY IT airtight packages. Sold only in Red, year with a. lar N eilaons, 1 and 2" lbs. good value. "Id Jallieu. Iiealltif wonderful buy; _ Make wanted. oneriul cams-rams CHOCOLATE! AT THE CENTRAL DRUGSTORI In k°°Pili8 With 0m‘ reputation for a fine aho of Christmas Chocolates we are again to the front this r and better assortment than ever . ea all the best makes, such as Moira Lowneya, Patterson, ' rangirnlg in price from 35o to a Smiles ’n Chuckles Christmas packages in V, at 30o, 60c and $1.20, are exceptionally Patterns’: assortment of y boxed in red at 35c a, lb, 1| a. you selection early-we will put it away till ‘ E0 A0 I i Everything m smokgqil Druggist Toilotriigpug’ m”! “my 8m“ we‘. Display 0i Emails. m. in boxes $10.00 Chocolates, Bonn B0118,‘ newspaper ‘the first ‘ r "its