Guard against chopping roughness and flaky dry- ness. Smooth on before going out in cold weather. Buy yours 1o- doy and save _hsIf on ovary botflei Ion A uMneoJnMs omv ~ IHQQRIII-i a. Hitfifibj CHARLOTTETOWN, P. E. I. wfill" ' DIILLVIEW SCHOOL October Honor Roll Grade X — l. Bernadette Mc-i Kcnzie; 2. Arlene lngs; 3. EIZJHDI‘ Drake. Grade X (b) __ l. Reta Crane. Grade V11 — 1. Aniding Morris. soy. Grads V1 - 1 Kenneth Grant} I, Alison lugs; 3. Emery Crane. Grade V - 1. William Morrlsn soy; 2. Norman Sheidow; 3.: Wendell Jenkins. Grade 1V — i. Hciun McKenzieII 3. Emma Wculherbic; 8. Francis Murphy. Grade 111 (a) fi 1. Faye Smith;i l. Florence Miirpliy. Grade 111 lb» - l. Prudence Weatherbie; 2. Raymond Taylor. i Grade 11 (at _ 1. Buddy Crane: I. George Taylor. ‘ Grade 11 (b) Weather-bio. ' - . Grado l m _ l. Joan Drakefi 1. ' Louise) Icrs, the Calgary issuing officer ‘J. Phyllis Dunphy; I. Connie Grant. Gail Sheiclcrw. Grade 1 (b) - 1. Malcolm Taylor. Grade 1 (c) -- 1. Joey Grant. Teacher _- C. Currie, -_-_i___i 100,000 LICENCES CALGARY, Alta_ (OP) ——!"or the first time in the history of Alberta. the sale of motor licences has passed the 100.000 mark. Until the arrival of the six.figure mark- was without plates for one week. It will be able to issue plates up to 101.300 before applying for additional ones. CHINESE IRONCLAD The frist ironclad warship was built by Admiral Yi Sun Sin of Korea in i594, 2'70 years before the Monitor and Merrimac of Civil _ with her big neighbor? THsggoAnoiAN. gHARLorT-mown Geneva T211“ Bring Empire Trade Changes Dy 1K. CAI-III!!! (Canadian Pnoolflff Writer) OTTAWA. Ndv. 14 - (om -A historic port of Canadian tariff structure is expected to got o go- ing-ovsr when trade agreements made at Geneva are debated in the House of Commons opening Dec. 5. 'I'hls is tho kitisb pmforonco system pioaocod Csnsds 80 yous ago which expanded into a network by which countries of the Commonwealth made special con- cessions for the entry of' ssch others goods. Torms o! the 1'! trodo sgroomonts Consds signod st Clsnovo will be snnouncod Nov. 1! and t-ho ensu- ing dobato probably will start Doc. 9. Mesnwhils experts of the oppos- ition gmups will bo expected to study tho agreements and prepare any criticisms. Opposition monitors designated by their parites to take over the debate on tariff matters will, have s busy time going over details and implications of the agreoment; and l complaints already have boon In 1808 Mr. Fielding nomad the tariff what it had really been, the British Preference, when he brought in s bill increasing the margin of preferences to 1-4 and extending its provisions to other Empire trading countries.,1n 1900 the preference margin was 1n- creased to 1.3 Thai. in 1007. Cansds provided o set-up in much tho some form asitistoday. Insteadof sunl- form prsfarenoe on all items. each item was dealt with separately and varying margins given/The net result, however was to extend the preferences, and additional parts of the Bnpiro come under it. Torilf Llltlxponds In 1919 tho United Kingdom sought to reciprocate, but her tar- iff schedule was limited to about a oooro of articles, chiefly luxur- ies. From that time Britain's tar- iff list expanded from year to year as she moved sway m free trade. It was not, however. until the depression that she was in o pos- ition to grant important prefer- ences. In 1,931 she posed the Ab- norms] Importstions Act which put a 50 per cent ad valorsm duty on many lines or goods from for- eign countries but allowed Em- pire goods in free. Thefso were add- ed to in 1932. preceding the 1m- perisl Conference in Ottawa that year. (An ad valorem duty, as the name indicates, is based on the value of the goods. Sometimes tar- iffs are based on quantity, such as so much a dozen. This is called s specific duty). The Ottawa conferences. initia- ted by the late Lord Bennett built up the comprehensive systém of Imperial preferences, much as they exist today. Eleven trade agree- ments were signed among Canada, United Kingdom, Australia, South Africa. New Zealand, India. New- foundland, Southern Rhodesia and the Irish Free State. The agree- ments were much the same except that each dealt with the commod- lties in which the two signatory countries were particularly inter- ested. The 1932 agreements were for five years and in 1987 a new ag- reement was signed between Cari- ada and Britain which maintained them with minor changes. willie agreements with other Empire countries were extended. In 1938 the United States, Brit- ain and Canada signed a new set of agreements by which Britain reduced some of her tariffs against the United States. thereby reduc- ing Canada's preference in the British Market. Britain put wheat hack on the free list with Canada's consent; and the three countries each made tariff concessions. heard that tho time is not suffic- lent. Tho most important angle doubtless will be how the agree- ments affect the British prefor- ences. Will Canadian exports be able to hold their overseas mark- ets with the preferences in those markets narrowed or disappearing altogether? Will tho lower tariffs offered by United states offset any losses? How will they affect the adverse balances in Canada's tirade Slotted By butter The British preference system reached its high point in the years from 1932 to the present. It grew from a small beginning in 1897 when the government of Si: Wilf- rid Laurier adopted o Reciprocal Tariff by which goods from Brit- ain, Ireland British India and New South Wales came into this country 1-8 lower than the regu- lar tariff. Why it was called a Reciprocal Tariff is not clear. Probably ‘the finance minister. Hon. W.S. Field- ing, foresaw unfavorable reactions from foreign countries and sought to make it clear that this gesture was in appreciation of the fact that while most other countries had stiff tariffs against our goods, Britain let them in free. She also let the goods of all other countries in free and as far as tariff im- posts were concerned, she could not reciprocate. The only foreign country to react was Germany which slapped on a special tariff against Canadian goods in addition to her regular tariff. Canada in return added a. super-impost against German goods. This caused Germany to back down and both special tar- Wartime Situation This was the situation’ when war War fame. “fs were removed. , “ came. Canada had a preference in ilIMIi ill! ii ill all THE FASHION SHOPPE THE FASHION SHOPPE A ‘ c t “hi5. o _» IT ISN'T TOO EARLYI TO SHOP OR LAY-AWAY FOR CHRISTMAS A small deposit will hold any article. Hero are n few sug- gestions: SLIPS NIGHTIES HOUSECOATS MITTS FUR MITTS BAGS ronirns onessss swnms ILANKETS nemesis- IATHROIES _ , PYJAMAS the British market on dairy pro- (luvts, apples. pears. eggs, con- Llcnsed milk. milk powder. honey. zmwrouglil; copper. lumber of all kinds. all kinds of fish, asbestos, zinc_ lead and patent leather. In return, roughly half of all classes of goods which Britain ex- ported to Canada were allowed in free - some 185 articles in the Canadian tariff. These included hooks and many lines of printing matter and printing machines; a long list of chemicals; most oils and tabla wear; unwrought alum- inum; a wide variety of steel and lion products; gasoline engines, automobiles, motor cycles and ma- chinery. Some British textiles came into Canada. free but mostly met a tariff somewhat lower than ‘hat against United States tex- ‘lies. As the war progressed Canada ieaded for a shortage of United ‘rates dollars and in December. i940. she passed the War Exchange Conservation Act which put a l0 per cent exchange tux on nearly all goods bought from the United States. and sought to buy more ‘rom Britain by a further lowering of tariffs. (The Exchange tax has since been rescinded.) As part of the background for ‘lie new Act. the war had made it? ' IED JACKETS WOOL and KID GLOVES ILOUSES SWEATERS PYJAMAS CARRIAGE WRAP! OVERALLS IODPURS IIIS MITTS and loads of other practical gifts for tho young onos. m: WISE-SHOP EARLY sum ssona: n. x‘ S I ('40 i. M" mu mum ‘Shipped is mm of “Hens for Harry” MEWS 144 in. scones GREEN DAL’S LAST CHANCE TODAY! YES, TONIGHT 1s‘ YOUR FINAL‘ CHANCE To can: sAvmcs THAT REALLY STIRRED THE ISLAND mom ' END T0 ENT)! YOU CAN THANK US _FOR THE GREATEST VALUES IN ‘To YEARS AND wn WISH To THANK YOU, r01: THE REATEST SALE IN OUR CAREER! WE SURELY ENJOYED SERVING YOU AND WE HOPE YOUR VISIT -WAS AS PLEASANT AS IT WAS PROFITABLE. OR N O SALE, WE ARE ALWAYS PLEASEI) TO SERVE YOU AND TO GIVE YOU THE BEST VALUES OBTAINABLE- SALE LAOIES’ 9a queen ii-npossible for Britain to hold its business in Canada. PMWUIBIIY in the textile industry. 119mm" °f higher wartime costs and higher shipping and insurance raics. The Canadian duties an Cottflll textiles had been roughly 2O p81’ cent ad valorcm and on rayon tex- tiles 25 per cent». The new Act lifted these imposts altogether or great- ly reduced them. hut the 25 per cent impost on woollen textiles was left on because Britain was hold- ing her woollen business fairly well. 50 Per Cent Cut 1n 1941 there was a so per cent cut on all tariffs against Britain not covered in the reductions oi‘ i940, and the duty on woollens was reduced to around 20 per cent. Ln introducing these tariffs re- tluctlons Finance Minister Ilsley made it clear they were purely war measures to protect Canada's supply of American dollars by buy- 'i:g more necessities from the Un- itcd Kingdom. The reductions WEYB fu have ended June 30 last. but have been extended to Dec. l5. The present situation is that Britain is shipping to Canada all the goods she can spare. A senior government official recently stat- ed that no goods Britain could send to Canada were being kept out by tariffs. This is part of the present ab- normal situation where demand far exceeds supply. The confer- ences at Geneva were aimed at providing for a smooth develop- ment of wmrld-ivlde trade as con-- tiiiions become more cQmDBUiIYB- Part of the 50-year-old British preference system may have gone into the general concessions pot_ to what degree will be revealed Nov. LAUNORY CENTRE TAKES DRUDGERY OUT OF WASHDAY By DOROTHY CAREW NEW YORK. Nov 14 — lAPl — About 2.000.000 families in the United States tote the family wash to thc nearest self-service laun- dry ccntrc. ‘ washers began to be userl for ccn- -tral washing facilities in apart- ment houses in the late '30s. Just three years ago the pub- lic laundry centre came onto the scene. The soap shortage was at its peak and there was little hope of replacing war-worn home wash- ing machines when thc first one opened its doors in New York. Now it is estimated at least 1.600 iurits are operating in more than (l3 towns and cities from coast rolsors. in M» against poultryloso Thursday, Zivo chickens to Washington for President Tru- insa and Charles Luoimon. chairman of tho Citizens rood Connnitfoo. Tho Irons woro lsboiod "Ions for man.’ miiokons ondod up o: Sorry" and "Leghorn: for Luck- tho Salvation Army whm lib-s. Ros L t Coopor ondbor son OsMr/(obgvo) sort them. . .,...._. to coast. Besides that, some 38,000 coin-operated washers are being used in apartment houses, in col- leges and industrial plants. The laundry shops are designed to take the drudgery out of wash- day. Some operators go farther than that. They use a variety of methods to make their service at- tractive to the housewife. Some centres have play pens and entertainment corners for children. Others provide facilities for women who want to knit. write letters or chat with friends. A new “super laundry store" in Los Ang- eles has a trained "sitter" to watch children whose mothers Iwant to shop while the machines work. Frills Too A Chicago unit has an arrange- ment with a neighboring beauty parlor so patrons can haveltheir hair done on the spot. Other stores have television sets and card tables for their patrons’ use. But. operators say the frills are of secondary importance. They claim women like laundry centres because o; their time and labor- saving features. A woman can get s nine-pound wash dons in 30 minutes at a cost of 25 cents for use of the machine. she handles her own wash, and It is done automatically from the point where she tucks it into the .1---_.--~. . washer untii it lTaERTsEeH-Efsked. washed. rinsed and partially dried. Within the last few months dry- lng and extracting machines (rwhlch whirl the wash to the proper dampness for ironing) have become more readily lvallable. It ls expected they will bo in general use in laundry centres in six months’ time, Irnnors also can be rented in some shops for l0 cents an hour. DEEEBEA BREATH! A battleship sucks in and breathes out enough alr Moll 34 hours to equal half her own weight, about 48.000 tons. . _P5' Coin - in - ilic - slot automatic ‘ --.-<:».n"< ROGERS MAJESTIC STEWART WARNER ASTRA Electric and Buttery Model.- Stainless Steel Gaffes Maker No more brokon tops, holi- toms or filters. This highly polished stainless stool cof- foo maker lasts o lilo-limo, licks: o tasty bmv. From $3.00 so SHOPPING EARLY ASSURES YOU OF A WIDER SELECTION. COME IN AND SEE OUR SPARKLING RANGE OF GIFTS FOR THE HOME THAT ARE lOUND.TO PLEASE. Exclusiiioly Dosignod LAGlN-ROSELLE V TABLE LAMPS The dollsoto oborm of milk gloss. s. ~prefcroaoo ollsso Colonial don. ls roprodnool in tho sosoo styles os mod in too original moulds- Tho an IIlrl column. Ibo pilo- opplo shops, lbo Victorian all oblate! style. nor rum ' suzcnuc IKETTLES esscnm: amen: Electric Toaster Gonuizo Toostmusfor cuto- motic Mouton. Glosmini nicklo plotod. Other toast"! with o prico vongo from ‘I-II-IE-II- Electric Iron Holp moko Iior Ironing W‘ Ior. Soo our dlfforont models, oil cosy to liondlo. M‘ ll" lco ' pr Froo 83.45 ll FULL LINE OF CHRISTMAS TREE DECORATIONS srsx , mm _ THAT ADD snunrv mcso mom IUIOLE LIGHT! 11m Lm Won! In Christmas Tm Dseorotionl ‘I06 KENT ST. MacDONALII RA no SERVICE