' 1v» Bu"; 1*: l-"OUP "ltartrtttetown Guardian tot’ fol N (‘hm-fer b hlvLurr . , , t’. J If liurllrll, F J I ' .tt It t Ir \ hm-lflnnun. U. 8 0 l -It ttlttt; lltrmtur. J ll llurltrtl F J I to». tram. Hath-t um! II K (‘urrtr ..ou pt-r yrttr (In tuhunre) ll tttt tuhtllnrt "Hill"! l" p” _\1"tr rttt uiltuttee) \|t|lrd hllilrl t t ‘t<l [KAT n . l iv~tt1t~l i t‘. a ...t |.. 1.1.1 tt amt ‘.3, IH¢L'I<I.\IBI~IIE 1 1936 .,,.;t fntt T». ript IQtSlTI-CIiIIIIS ~ "t ' t' Tt» atutttal tttt-t-titty; of tlte ‘t . . . : :1. l'1<t utttt tltut-tttattltas} ‘ttllllllrll’. itrgatt with state-f tnisrt-presetttittg rattee forces itt the l\‘i1v. C. l >. t"1-ta:_v 11f the l'_(’Ll€l'—' t: ttf Prttltiltiziott enforce-i t ~""iitt'!ti 1n the Patriot - t ";t eitnsitlerzible t-tI't-tr"tl crtlttnttts of ,_ -iin:j= '"" ~ uwaitetl l1_\ :1 ‘ie t t 1 " c Fortun cul- l statements ‘l1 “agit.'itin:t" lul t l " ‘ Yzi- ntugltt to threaten _ ' t-ttz-zt-spt-tndt-ttts if they" \-,,- v t tlt." it ts ttt tlte statetnettts '-~' - t ., \\'\t’1"1:v.tttt'ri1. representing l- ‘""' '2. tItat UlIlUCllFJll is l . ' . .ti will" lllflllllCTIlCVY \\ll(‘ll hrtttt-stattt .\linister of l... ltatl the courage to c .. cattilalitus conditions "tl to tlrittkittg itt tlte town ' - Prt-tnier (lites not at- , 1 - - l1) "at-r tlte questions pttt _.. ' . ‘ "t\f\"t"ttt<\\-1t.-rti, lle merely ' zcttfs ztllwgittg exaggeration . - qtttt, cttttttltil with the assur- ~t i't< ‘dlt it t'\\tt'1n-:t.1.’s, opinion, - :"<-t.-:1tt'tll\" improving along the '1 enFttrvl-tttittt." ztttd cottld be - Htvctl if tltete was less “criti- in." . _ . > ti" ha: <tate<l~and Ptznttttztz wt ‘ ts tttt; ill"llt‘ll --th.'1t there was an -,t.-_..t ttt gtttet-tttttcttt liquor sales > .' tttt- itt-ttttlw ttf this year. This .. . w .500 per montlt, or : a 1' ttftttl. as is more likely, 1X< ttt‘ this year would not 1.151 \ t; , gt y i-1i"‘in'isi‘.. ' , " i "- 1:, ..1_:»lies. in a remarkable t" ' iIrtt the late Crttiservative Govern t" " ‘ "" " , "1. ' t'.vt1 rears at least, was not i i with the ltootleggers. l‘ 1 lt-tttitv: it had allotveil p1 >1 111i 11.111] li)_§_§ to “sharply ile- fte this itt ihi- light of the l’renti<-r's colleaque. llON llrrtsith-ttt of tiotutcil. ntrtde in tit‘; 'l'lti-tt in tlppo-itiiwn. "liltt- l'r-tltil1i\iott (font- rtz-txicaiittg lteer and liiptor it ‘the pzovi-iotis of tlte Act '- ' ~.t;,- $11.1! 111v (fovrrtttttrtti antl- i - t "it. "QM/t ttlirir hvtttlttt‘ bi/ilt/Kv t" '.'t,~ ptrrtt/rt-l ltm/l/rt/ttrtxr 1/111.’ t 1 ‘, .‘1lr.rt’l1 It). 1035.). l " : tttt t-it tlettnttuce [tarticttlarly- ' ‘ i -' -r tn-‘ttsr-tttt! fm-fttt.rt'.r. alleging "l - altootttltcr itt excess of re- ' vutttif . in strtttorizztt tones: ttltwrrit .\'1t_\' I/iil/ I/trv nrt‘ 1 " ‘ “W11 ltizu ru/ictt cottzlitfittts ' "' .\nd the llatriot. is -i atntiatt‘. also is tptoted, adds: ‘n; rttt tpitwiittt today? :~' 1o I vt ryitnt- that l’tu~;.\tti-:n 3141 fttllottitig a catnoutlageil t t 1' ’ '. "t": 1‘ ..;t‘t"_ tittdet- tht- pretext of . l ttudvr-illittg, the ltootleg- it: 1h 71:,‘ that ht‘. hfittijlllllg liquor ~ t“ Province, that lie is is- l ttuntlter of scrip. to doctors 1:11. rtttll that the sale of gov- iut‘ itt exri-ss of the sale under .tti:1tit:i~tr.'1ti-t1i. ll, is easy to - ll tltlwltites for legalized pur- lty iatlit of ltrewery iti- . law, and tlte lukewarm 1 '2 .t;"lt_\". that revenue. not law" " ‘tin. -:"t1utitti's objective. .-\n<l "t - ' t‘ .1=1t (‘.\.\t1't1t-"t.i. lies in this .1 lti- can forte the temper- ‘- stmlltttv this tiollCy, and : at ='tt threat iltat any “agita- rt lilllig» pot the Cant-- t‘. ttttteil -l1ut the temper- ‘ ." ' '"t1tl i» ltis ttnswer to the dele- :'t izxvriillvt‘. of the 'l‘ettiper- '.-.l."ii on _l."tt1tt:tty 3t last waited to itrge strietet" ltitv enforce- -"t ‘ttt- l 11v l\'i v. L}. L‘.ttti.t't.t:.\\'t2n- . atal l~'1"v. (t. A. tjuiusTit-z, sec- ntlttttttttd at that titne, stating tittt-tn; tugs‘, "\\'e are of tlte opinion that i111‘ s1 . . tut which we ltrittg ltefore you is one tulticlt ha. grttvstt attd is growing steadily worse." 'l'\-,"tt ttt- three factors were cited as "the ttritttarv ct-tttriltutors to this evil"; first and forttttittst ltiiittz; “the nrtrivtrrrntfrrrl mid ittt/irnpcr di.t"/-1'l1it/i/1tt of serif/r for purchasing was! quan- /-' 3r of ilrfn/t from 1/14‘ (infvrrrtttietil vrttdorx." ‘llte ileli-gatiott received front Ptttzmttzn (jawe- Bt 1.1. and llox. Mn. I.1I‘:IIA‘;I‘I, the assurance tltat “their requests would receive most serious eon- lidi-ratirttt." \t\'lt:tt was the consequence? At that time the scripts permissaltle by law were limited to fifty per doctor per ntonllt. Shortly thereafter the rttttttlter was increased to sixty-live-fifteen for hard liquor, and fifty for beer. Subsequently, on Ptu-tutrtt (‘ttttrnt-zttfs own admission in yes- ter-l.'i_v's Patriot, the "monthly quota" was ‘t tli-lterl altogether, and now there is no limit, "~|tt the law 0f supply and demand, or ' ‘ " t- arbitrary limit which Ptuattrttan (‘aurnann ' tzts talvn upon himself to impose in certain ::t<t-s, which he does not specify’. but which. front his record and declared policy, are utrve hlil,’ . l-llIl-l. \~..t i1‘l.i l’ ll. Frettzied Finance :\ftct a ft-ittttgltfs cttgiiatiint, the lfiitrio? tame out yesierilay- witlt a twtt-colunttt editorial reply to our charge that the Latnpbcll tiovern- ntettt had ltorrotvcrl $250,000 to renew‘ a loatt which. \"lll1 the $51tmoo sail i115; fund on hand accordltig lit last. _ve;ir's ;\it-.iit,tr's report. re- quired only $w.~.1.<~x1 of additional lt-trrowittg to H1811. ttur cottteittporary says we are wrong l)(’t‘Z.\ll>L‘ the sittltittg fund is" now over $ttt.o0o and will amount t-t $t'-t1,ooo when the loatt mat- ures ttext spring. This, of course, ntakes the action of the (Ettnpbell tioverntttent all the more ittexcttsaltle. lf there is $00000 in re- serve, that tneans that only $184,000 was re- quired on the new" loan. That was the extent of the (Stivertttttettts legislative tiuthority to borrow‘ for this purpose. The excitse ottr cuntetttporary gives" for the borrowing of attcttlter $250,000 is that the $66,- ooo provided for the old debentures will “pre- sumably remain" as a sittltittg fund for the new loan. Could anything be tnitre absurd, or less satisfactory to the lZlXltll_\c'l'<f The sinking fund which is now- "presumably" to be ntisapprott- riated for a new-loan is fixed by .»\ct of Par~ liatnettt, 193:, "ax ll "$1.1 [W111 to be tired for‘ l/tu rcdcmftitut of . 111 tiuZtrtt/tirrx and for no nf/trr fur/titan." "fiaiil tlebetttttres" refers to the debentures issued itt 11,13.’ l1_v the .\l.-\ti.\lll.l..\l\.' (iU\'l-Il{.\'.\ll-1.\"l‘, not the debentures issued this year by the C.-\.\tt~t1t-:t.t. (t1 t\"1:tt.\".\tt<"..\"r, who are obliged. lt_v the terms" of their own ltorrotvittg _-\ct, to pro ville their own sitiltiug ftttzils. 5o we ltave tltt- ‘lt" oi this dictatorial liu\'C't‘lltilClll. tjtlllljs the l t ‘ilt 11f brealtitig a law which its twretlet" sttrs enacted for the security of the ltond ltulders. Pttttttnk :\lll-Il(ll.»\l{'I‘ or Pitt-iti- Il-lk llt-zrttritx nude no more egregious blutt~ ders tittattcially than this. Yet the Llvwi-ntzta. GOYl-ZRNAIEXT expects to “get away with it” for the time being. PRl-ZHIl-Zlt Cmtrtttitt. rezilizes his administrzttiott will be shortdivetl, attd that he ititends riding “ltigh, wide and ltattdsottte" over public opinion —-not to speak of law, order and good govern- meitt~tvltile the opportunity lasts. Editorial NOIOS The last month 0f the year. i l‘ Pl‘ Now thcre will be practically nothing on our ntittds but Christmas and all that it stands for. v tr v The Crippled Children's fund and other charitable enterprises will be enhanced by tltts week's Rotary’ radio auetirtti. _ =v= 4 >I< llt"<1t~l;\~i]1tt_ Ont, with ,1 populatiott of 10,000 proudly proclaints that for the past three years there ltavc been no fatal tttotot" accidettts \\'llll- in its jurisdiction. ll! i‘ i‘ Ilad we li\"e t“L‘ll1l1l'l'.\' :tt flltatva there would be liovertuneut. wttrl: at llrure Stewart's as well flS at the airport, 1111i t-t ittcutioit ltoar-l auil $7.50 per iuotttlt on farms for our \lllt‘llllJl(\_\'L'(l. ta >s< s More Nit-J Yttrlc" pa-scil lltattltsgivitt}; ltaclv lttnrr- tl...tt itt i lwfota‘ it is att- ttoiutverl lty railroad. .' 11c and ltus i"1111i— tianie- who detrlareil traffic rattgi-il front 3o to r34 per cent. lteavier than itt 1313;. ‘k 1F ‘i1 Sit fat" there ltas" lt.t-tt a _'tt pi-r vent, increase iii Christtnas ntailittg for ztltrrtad, antl lift-d office etffivials zttttieipztit- even a gri-zttn-i" in- crease as Decetttlter advances l't\\'IIl'll~} the _L{l‘t.'2ll event of the Christian year. U‘ i‘ i‘ \\'lty has "fionttttttttisttt" rtssttnteil a tttettacing: tneattittg when “tlttutttttttiiy” represents all that is lovely and of good report? Ileeatz-t- the word “(fontntttttisttd was first coined iu the secret revoltitiottary societies of l‘aris l>'."t\\'(‘l‘l1 i834 and i-Qji). .\ llllllIlYPtl years ltzts not sitfficetl to wipe ttut the stienza. r Ill i‘ >1! .~\ l7..\‘..\. autotnoltile cettir>:t1_v' executive just returned from liurotte, states the prosptcrity of Britain is scttttetltitig tttarevloiis, and there seemed to be no limit for the export of .t\tn- erican cars. Already export sales of utolrtr ea s‘ for the present year totalled 500.000 to 700,- ooo uttits, cotttrastt-il wit-h t2o,ooo car; exported itt I933. The .~\uterit'.'ti1 car was holding its own in cotttittetttizil cotuttrics attd had increas- ed more than 3o per cent in South Africa and .\ttstralia, because of the getteral prosperity. #10!!! The colonizing of Northern Quebec gites on apace. On l7riil:1_v' 23 fatnilies cottsistittg of 115 persons left to pioneer the new territory tinder ' the Department of Colottiztttiott, 'l‘et1 lillllllll“ from La 'l'ttqttc were hottntl for Atttos tlistrict; six front Chicontinti, for La Sarrc; foitr front Montreal and three front St. John's also will settle near Attics, Colonization officials said early this week 25 more fantilies from the Eas- tern Trnvitsltips will go ttortlt to open new farms. _-\hottt 3.7m persons ltave gone back to the land in Quebec (luring the past six ntontlts. tr tr tr “Dictators” sometimes get a jolt in the nick of time. It ltappetted last tveelc to Joseph littgette dePatriclc, would-he “Dictator of hlotttreztl," who will have the (tpporlttnity Io ful- fil his destiny in a penitentiary for the next two years. DePatrick was sentenced by judge En- right in criminal court for defrauding a local store. llc needed to go to jail so he cottltl suf- fer, the ex-cttttrlidate frtr the ntafvoralty’ told thr- court. “so I can ltecottte a real dit-t;ti<tt-_;||] dictators stiffer." The 3_;-_ve:1r-olil l\'hrtrlt' Iq. land-born architect fared two fraud charges, and the trials cottsutnrd a great deal nf lime, They were enlivened hy lcttgthy oralions on the part of the accused which brought boos and hisses from a packed cottrtroottt-dellatricl;'s biggest audience since he entered the mavor- alty lists. The accused made the tttost of the event, too, by putting forward lhc unique dr- fence that one of his supporters promiwl tit contribute $25,000 to his election ftttttl. and likelv to have been inspit-t d ltv pilfllsqn |||i||i\'t~s titan any cottsitlertttton lot temperance. meantime permitted him to tll‘.'|\v t‘llt'l|lli's _<ttt his account. This the alleged supporter dented- lt ntitst be apparent to all that ' ali—i‘l‘hflbldI LbCVA§Jh nu wit,“ ha. a“, our.“ tuft...» no.1’ Hutnlg m. ...., tcvtti pd-Aflkl Mutt‘ pats tt|,v, it- Ilu tllhnt.‘ Ml MAviLn-lllifl 111.. lAIU Jllltb. buck watt tutu carv- —A.tALt.‘l‘3l'¥ acxttatt tt-ttu tnto you," LNrALU-rd. tin-tuft, lie tteuuCd tvI JIIHH; Ilvlllb tilc€f IIC “knit B. CUtllptL 1e act OI tecttt m‘ CL] Oltl. UA i! LJOtLHHM-U 10th. Ulgfiht- Because Dlettdelsttlttt t .1 , a Jew, a statue etc-nod to ltntt .3115; nus been rcttioveu and utst.._-.ti by the Nazi Govertttttcitt. but. inc tvcrla will rcmemuei‘ MGXZCIESbOlIII lung after it. has forgotten Hitler and his pU])|)L'LS.-—BI”OCkVlllC Recorder and Times. " Beavet-brook declares that. there wLl be no war for years, and that. growling nmluns won't. bite. A few determined growls out of the BrIt- islt bulldog nngltt. ltave the desired effect of searing the yapping of "lesser breeds wttltottt the law" Into a respectful silence. Uttlike certain other nations, Britain doesn't de- pend on cheap tltetttricultsm or blufL-Hamilton Spectator. An advertlslng specialist in Bos- tott declares that women certainly read the advertisements and buy accordingly". He says: “For selInt, women's dresses, advertising is six- zeett per cent more important than low price, and ttvetttjy-seven per "cat more important than style." ‘Xe reached this decision after In- terviewing 3.000 women In regard to the factors which led them to buy at the taartieulttr stores. He also found that forty-three per cent of the women bought. their dresses at the stores whose newspaper advef- tisin-z they liked best.—Amherst.burg Echo. _Rural life. it seems to us. is nat- urally less formal. more democratic than urban life, but not for that ‘easott lacking in those qualities which make for worth-while culture. ‘ Where rough edges remain, they tend to be worked smcou-t by time, [fl/ates by the PVay l “TT 1 John l‘. Data.“ t4 ‘tutalo lam. t THE cnrvtzporrtsrctww cutttzotatv PUBLIC FORUM fhln MluII u one; In the discus-Ian by unruponnlenia of qnutlon cl lnluut. ‘flu Chuloltotowl llnlrllnl loan Iol ttocouully "than IL: I’ll\III ml nrncpollelll. 1 “WTIERE IS THY BROTHER?" Sin-Our law breaking. rum sell- ing ollgaarchy afford us an unde- niable proof that. "man's inhuman- lty to man. makes countless thous- ands mottrtt." Against the law, they sell rum, spreading poverty, crime; ruin andt death through this Heaven blast land. Betraytttg the people who trusted them, they have become so "puffed up" wltlt power that. they have no hesitation In t-ldlng rough shod over the betrayed electorate. They close their ears to the cry oi tnothets and fathers, wives, sisters and daughters, pleading against. dealing out body and soul IZOLSLD to their dear ones. Nor do they trt their self considered Invlnclbillty allow themselves to listen for a mo- ment, to that thunderous", deep searching. vital question. “Whftre l5 thy Brother?" Do they think they can kill, rob, starve, ruln In 11ft: and death and yet not. be held ac- countable for their deeds? Have they IQrgoLten there ts a Court that has no respect for P91"- sons, a court where there Is no contradictory or disputed evidence? Have they forgotten there Isacout-L y that declares that. It. makes no dlf- t ferenee whether a man is killed by , bcittg scld or given Sffyfihnine °Yt belnv sold or given rum! The Sell" or giver of either must 116B! 111C voice, “Where ts thy Brother?" 1 , 5ft‘, etc.. am ANTI-KILL TIME FOR ACTION sir,-It I: now evident. even w the most obtuse, that. our Province Ls in the grip of the liquor traf- fic. It Is time for the forces of l temperance to reject: the disguise-a t and get, into action. When the coil of the python or cobra ls fell; In our every fibre Ls not. the time Yficlllalfi w argue with or to plead for mercy with the greed hllnllered There ts a continuous striving to aelnrvc greater attractiveness in the I iP-lifiv And the standard of edu-t nortiott of lti"h sehco‘ grtzdtpttps 3p tr~rted bl: farming its n vmy of 11f, "~'l'"t“" 5 "dill! tzreaier.—-Oma.lttt Woricl-Herald. All 51""! Dvfinh- fear invasion- i1o'_spectfically the invasion 0f the nttfttttttt Intruder bent attest or ni _ lite unfanti n ideas (tress. or be- l ltz-vlour. Insularitj: ls a dertdlv anl insltliotts thine. irisottitt". nil thr- ‘l°°“ “'91? "f lllflllrlli 11rd t:e‘irtt and ‘"li‘ll("‘!'S tnttst rnttsfuntiy “tater, Um‘- lhvt’ enter not into the superior natrctvttcss of the lrcrntit. or the Ftnul" sic I-antis t: ion of those witlnttt .=t:.1tdtt‘t"d.x. The "ler5nr breeds w-‘tttottt the law," 11w b3)‘. b. ans. the lit .(. from upon ccn- f lhr‘ larger influetv-r-r; of 111C};- Tlte House about ("a _ ‘of (‘ommntts dehztlc at xloataprlltatt Ptfiee dis- . .eatl interest in the t nteeiinns". Ebpnc. a a these p11». “l,” ll" l" rt .. wt; ctttltctttt lbw-Flu. and the Ho e ,v~C,-e~.,,. was donlrlttsr; exprer. ‘y d‘ u y lPPlillns tvlten, in anstvet" to "n m lPYFlIPllYFII 11V Itfr. Calhtelter“ tvlto -‘ casted that the DfllCl‘ should b: l w" "will." and the llfll: Ioplutlzt ii on‘. he so cl it. would sintpllty the whole prcbent If hi; rtrttltt lzitve t1 at iaat. We ltove not. been altogei wiittotti. expurmtee in these mat e11; in the North, and it recent vizai of 3:1" C-"Wlllfl Mns~ ley to litlinbttrgzlt Leader ztrutiser; the .,,t atiil prov; " 1' the saute sernes whet"- . ‘llte Commit 1.2L pre- ld and his band ttttpettt" a my =u>il=u'vntly rttiftt- t; p V. t, llflltlOll and a t-ptrtt oi bellieo. - 1W invades the mot pate lLal. citiz- en.—-Nait‘ottal Iteview". Whatever quarrels A and I! may ‘lllltf eoneertttttg tlte effect, Q1‘ 311;, l iwlitzv or lllltlt. there can be no valid ‘Hround o1 conflict be‘ a-en primary "llillflly and seeondttrdy industry. He uses a plough wlnelt is also a tiroduct of secondary industry. Probably us he works 1m smukm u pipe made in it fttetoty, I11 ed \v.tlt ltobacco prepared itt tt factory for smoking. Back n". the homestead his wife works tvlilt the itid of tnan)‘ [utensils which only secondary tn- tlustry can produce. The city work- er, before setting out. for ltts tac- tory or office, breakfasts on brcuu. butter, eggs and bacon, or permit». oatmeal porridge, none of which would be available to ltlnt without the work of primary producers. —— The Australasian. A campaign phIeI. Issued by the Republlcan headquarters argues that. Governor Landon Is a more sincere smoker than Presid- ent; Roosevelt and therefore ought. to be elected president. This prob- ably exhausts eomptttgn arguments. There cannot be anything left. The pamphlet came from the bottom of the bag.—Toronl;o Mail and Empire. "Where war threatens In the world today It. is principally because of economic rivalries. Economic rtvalriet. Inspire the scramble over colonies. But‘, that. colonial policy in -t tttt-"art ' t ~ be Indlcnterl by our own ttorrtttttt- in imperialism. A t;t‘l|e'.t1‘.n't i113» wt link 0V9! H10‘ PltiIl-‘tptt-r", \\llI"ll never even paid int t. itt trtttle to its; on the huge t-Illlls llt:y cost In blood and hcasir. . Ottr best. cusomers are not subject, peoples wro l'ok u‘) at u; over the llIllZIilf‘ of at gut‘, but. our friends net-ts the borfier. By promottttn trade tuttottg friendly neighbor: not. hv 'l'll‘fllllt" ts and offensive nntl (intensive nlliantm~~ i: the w-w" 1-‘ 't!ll‘ll for truce."- Bufiulo Tutti» “DUI-kl;‘Mlilbuuinc Arms‘ flrt. entered by weakettltt; the Whctt y jthe cajollng wooing . twitching: enemy. We are In a. dead lock with it. and we must either kill It. farm home and the farm premises l or "It. ' ill kill us. There is no other vrfthout. traditttz comfort for arllfie- ' C1101“?- Our people have shown stamina cntlon constantly rises. Yllleracy 1- ‘ In the past. Deplte money and} virtually non-existent. and the pro- rum attribution, the promises of revenue and lessened taxation. and of smooth tongued brewery advocates. we ltave always measured up to the stature of (Jhrlstlztn manhood and womanhood. and defeated the se- -‘ ducers. We can do it again; but let us ', but the invasion ofl not. forget. that. we have now to fact a more powerful enemy than ever before. An enemy reinforced by secret, nnd in many case; by open support from governments and ruling powers. With lnrrrczr- ed profits from expert sales under the United States Trude Treaty. as shown by their dividend returns, f-ltey have more money than ever ‘to use in their processes for dc- con tiiueneles and eon- trolllng powers. Time ltas proven that the wedge ‘ operation of temperance laws. They will maintain that; we are still under Prohibition. which Is no: the (n50. and by creating such ltor- lrors" of rlruttketincss and crime as are tzoiv in evidence. will itttrlbttte it to our proltlbllory latvs. and by that, ntcans bring them into dis- repute when they campaign for cur defeat. Such mock enforce- ment as we now ltave i; the forc- rutttzet‘ of their attrition campaign. ‘There is presinnably three year" before the voters will have the trotter of decision, But three years will quickly puss, and we should not be titmrepnrcd, The traffic Is already sharp upon the job of tin- (Zerittlnittg public confidence and public setttitnettt. Do we propose to wait until they ltave poisoned our while spustettt with their tn lduous imclerltanrt propaganda? And there tnay net be even the three year" allowed us for ])r9p:1r;|,‘,fcn_ The crnslt may come at any moment. W~ shouitl organize for action. There should be iumnlmlty t'tt rc- fitsing to allow the tmffle to par- ade ottr government. control system as now ntlnttnlstered. tlressed in $11011" i-tarb, and denounce it as a sample of prohibition. It Ls; not, prohtbithitt. It government s-fle tContlntted on page 5) XMAS GIFTS f We carry a complete llne of MAX FACTOR. YARDLEY IIOUDNUTS IIOUBIGANTS EVENING IN PARIS THREE SECRETS SPRINGTIME IN PARIS CUTEX MINTYS COLGATES PALMOLIVE any many other famous Toilet Goods. We also carry brush, comb and mirror sets In chromium flnlah for ladies. Military Sela In both ebony and chromium. Clgnra and cigarettes, pipes and tobacco. Our plpe line In the finest. In the cIIy, wlth prIces IIIII- Ing from 50o to $8.00. CALL AND SEE US. l THE 2 MACS PHONE 315 ‘ the white corpuscles In the blood In- your! . m»; 110.0. 43 y lame: W trtur ts a court Dutxng the war, one of lltc young physteiatts on our satff was stttcaen with flu which developed Into pne- umonia. when the count. of the whhe corpuscles-Lhe dtsea c fight.- et's—wa.s taiett 1t. was found that despite his severe hates there was practically no increase in their ztuntoer. The eott ulttng physlclan shook h:s head and murmured, "No reststattce." Tlte patient died two days later. During any illness the resisting forces of the bcdy come forward to Jgltt. it off. The temperature rises, the breathing ls ntore rapid. the heart teat; ntore rapidly, and crease in number as it is their wot-k to fight off the little organisms that. are invading the body. Sometimes these lttle organfsms are already in the body, but the (lefettee forms are so ztrong that they can't, ntake any lteadway; they are unable to get a foothold in de-. veloplttg an ailment. Dr H, Mort-all in Medical Press and Circular. London, declares that a cold ls a visible conflict between tttierobes-sntall organ‘strts—-and the defence forces of the body. “Every microbe which obtains a foothold ln the throat, or rtoe stimulates the defence into mofe vigorous actaon and will produce the catarrh, swell- ing of the mucous (lmlttg) mem- branes and increased irritability, with sneczlttg and coughing." The fevers which produce skln 1n- fiatnmatlotts or eruptions-measles. chickenpox, scarlet, fever-ere all attended by catart-lt, the mainfra- tare of a cold. The cottdltlon which brings about this degree of reaction is the lessened resistance of the body to the attacks of microbes, that Is caused bylo s of heat. And this loss of heat. or cooling of the body I5 caused by evaporation. "The usual way ln which a 001d Is rattght, is by sitting In wet, garments. partlcttlztrly wet. shces and ttooltl g‘. Evaporafien is of course hasened by zt (trait. The tttr cannot: be mo cold to breathe its long as we are protretezl from loss of body heat. The nit‘ we breathe in Is healed I10 body lteat by the time It gets to the beck of the throat." “While it; ls both healthy and rnfe to s‘eep m a. draft. In bed. It: Is ltlglfy (langerotts to sit In a draft unless one is protected by an over- ront: such as would be wom when ‘iltlng or tttrttg in an open car In the opcn air." Frevcttttttg less of heat. I- thus n bit: factor ltt preventing colds. it 4ft: A GREETING Good ntoutittg, Life-and all ‘lltittga glint and beautiful. My tint-Leis ttolltittg hold, But he that. owns the gold, The sun, is my great friend- His tspeltdtttg ltas no and. flail to the ntorttatg sky, winch bright cfotids ttteasurc high; Hall t0 _vr.tt birds whose throats Would ttttmher leaves by notes; Hail to you shady DOWOYS. And you green fie'ds of flowers. Hall to you wonteit falr. 'l‘ltrtl. tnztke n show so rare ! ttt rWlt as white as milk-- l Pct trrlit-tt 0-: silk: Good morning. Life-unit all Things glazl and beautiful. ~W. ll. ‘Davies. Ha rdins “Asco ” ----_.-........_....._._.__ DECEMBER t, m, "lav/t! f/te w [berm/er " nd you can buy flte NEW BllEVllflll on flit" BENHlAl llllllllll INSTALMENT" Plll p, wiflt ifs low cast (‘OIIIPOYND TABLETS The remedy that relieves paln of every kind and does If (‘Iflly without. any after-effects. i The I-‘riettilly Station C.F.(.‘.Y. will tell ynu nll about this won- derful preparation and how you can obtain a [tree Gift vllued at one dollar for the purchue of a bottle of 100 Asco Tablets M $1.25. This ndlo message Ia Intu- esting and or vllal importance to you and your family-Time in any cvcnlng and profit bytho Informallnn you wlll receIve. Asco Tablets are puI. up In two sizes 25c and $1.25. All order: attended Io promptly pm! pre- pared on melpt of prlce. E. ll. FOSTER CENTRAL DBUGSTOBI tt 1'," u-lzed dhfrlbntor for IKE. Inland Fink‘ t‘ 1 > ‘- r Ml. For a Delicious Cup 0f Eull Flavoured ‘Pea Use BRA HMIN Orange Pekoe Tea lea Poll Sayv We Recommend A Refund Annuity- for persons who want a monthly Income (P8P able by cheque) and flnd that present interest rates are not sufficient to pay adequate income- Our Great-West Life Annuities-either on R single life, or on husband and wife jointly — provide complete security, high return, "d great convenience. For further particulars consult IIYIIIIMAII 8t 00., LIMIT!" Establlshed 1872 Lower Queen Street Charlotttlflw" J. M. Nicholson District Manager Suntmersltle