i. h 37 hospital of St. V_ certain merchants Uiknized themselves as a rcligioul I knights settled in Rome. ' existing knights, assisted by deéd THE CHARLOTTETOWN_G_I_I_ARDIAN PAGE Fog; ms GHARLOTTETOWN sunnuuu Phi-nor s ‘resident-h Scl-rvlnry— Lia-m. -L‘oi. “whim,- M. l’. l), A, Mackiunou, l). Vice President-J. R. Burner! B. U.‘ fltlilUf unJ sluungmg Director-J. ll. liurnert Ah-uUCllllQ lid luru-J-"ruuk llu- 537115. a Walker lrd D K. (‘urrio , T565 For year (ln lGVl-UBE) delivered. $4.50 per yeur (in advance) mulled in (‘kzrndl nud United Slates. AII\I'.NTI.\'I\U IH’ UNITED srrr . -' [I10 “\'L‘lr\\'li'l Spec Il‘lfl"*il'1N'l‘.-\Tl\'l!S Agency lne. New York Contra Bull-ling, Nun u: n; \iv,i\i'.il klelu-‘i i'.i-l:l|ug_ llemul lun-rsnuu- it uu 1g. . . 3 l't\_ Willuugitl-v lk-iu-r lfuiilliug Chicago: Syndicate Trunl uiiil g, Si. lwuis, lllmu U.|ll\|i|lR..\ll1l||lf\; kluuadiiock Building, Sun Francisco: 11.’); Sq fifllh Sireet Pinln-rvlpliin Morning Maxim ' Some people who are hiding thei well hlde it under a lint-up. r light under a bushel could jun a5 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1932 TWO CONFERENCES Tho early fll-llillkfi uf llvxt wrll likely see {up important world‘ year l nbnffliflmcs in sea: ion. The general, disuznmnrcnt conference, which has‘ been 1n recess srncc lust July, will‘ rcwonvene at Geneva un Jilllllflfy 31.’ The <imlfsrev¢fl has nlrvflds‘ nwde ‘Wales. The British order devotes 1t-' progress in respect banning pqison gas, aerial bombing, guns and similar to limiting or .l>i‘ m’ l ~_:e v.11 zoplcs, ,1. wiicn it reconvclies will have before 1t such (ifhcnlt prob- lcntsyzis land effcetivcs in Europe and iiu.‘ rural qiacx-t; ‘ll. The problem of E1lZO‘,‘.(*llli armies is COliipilFfllCd for the moment by uncertainties in the German situation and as to the course that the new French Gov- briunent will take. Aforeover, the United States is not dsposed to have the naval issue reopened unless pre- ceded by some sealing down in Eur- opean armies. The hlonetaiy and Ecanomic Con- fcrence, which will be affected dir- nctly by the progress made within the next few months on the war debt question, is scheduled to meet in London‘ at, a date not as yet cle- tenrdned, but probably in April. Al- ready the organizing committee has held meeting: Q make plans for the parléy and a committee of experts has met in Geneva to start work on the agenda. The latter committee will resume its delibera- tions early next month. No delegations have yet been ap- pointed to this conference, but Prime Minister lvlneDonald and Sir John Simon, the British Foreign Secretary, have taken the lead in assembling the committees for their deliberations, since the idea of 5l10}_1_5 conference was first spon- yu-pd by Gregg. Bgitnln, altluugh the call for it was issued by the League of Nat-ions at the suggestion of the Lausanne reparations con- ference. The agenda, according to present, plans, will include silver stabilization, removal of trade re- Itrietions such as import quotas. improvement of foreign exchange, and tariff policies, but not tarlfl rates or xvar debts owed the United States. The scope that the agenda. should take was first suggested by the Lnwanne conference last July in enumerating mtirtsurcs necessary to solve and financial difficulties of the world crisis. economic A VENERA TILL’ ORDER 'I“he Order of St, John of Jerusal- em which was rz-crniiy bestowed by His fvlnjesty the King ugmn Premier Bcnnctt, is one of the c-‘llcst orders in the Briiish Eirurrc. Alilwuxh its origin is somewhat nizscure, it is klloufl that its trtic (lllliO from a John feundtd at‘ Jerusekrm amut the _\'.'."Il' i070 byi of rhnulfi who orders of hospitallers. The order grew rapidly and dcveinpcd into an lriterralioiial, milLlanv-rrliqivms lny :onfrntcrnity' for the relief of crus- aders, and was later sovereign in Rhodes and afterwards in Mnita, from 1530 to 1798. where its knights kcpt gullcys and galleon». to attack the Barbary Corsairs and to prevent the spread of Turkish rule in the Mediterranean. In the latter year the order was driven from Nfalta by Napoleon, and the majority of knights, being of French origin, rc- turned t0 fiance, while the Italian After the loss of Malia, the ordin- nry council oi the ovder, which re- presented the majority of the then erzorucd at Paris in 1827, in the reconstitution of what is now the Grand Priory of the Order of the Ha=pita1 or st. John of Jerusalem in England. The British order is thus descended frcm the original order, and its chancery is at "W In 1688 Queen victor-in granted a Royal charter reoonstiutms the British order with a constitution, somewhat like that of the existing Builiwick of Brandenburg in Ger- many, and the first Grand Priors thereafter were Kings Edward VII and George V, while Princes of sclf to organizing hospital and Red Crou work, notably in the st. John's Ambulance [Association and Brigade, which during the Great WM‘ worked in collaboration with the British Red Cross SOclet-Y- The badge of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem is a Maltese cross of white enamel, with n. lion and a. unicorn in alternative angles of gold or silver according to grade, urith a bla<k watered ribbon. King George is the Sovereign fiend and Patron of the British order, H. R. H. the Duke of Connaught is its Grand Prior, and there is a. secretary-gen- erai with u. chapter of 350 knights and dames, consisting of five class- es. Mr. Bennett was honored by be- ing made a member of the $963116 class-Knight of Grace. STRIKE PROPOSALS Some hundred Alberta farmers have voted at a mass meeting to inaugurate a. wheat strike next spring~that is. w refrain from seeding grain. The resolution is to be introduced at the annual meet- in! o! the U. F. A. at Calgary on January 17. It is predicted by the Montreal Gazette that the good sense of the delegates will prevail on that occasion and that the strike proposal will be given itfi quletus. The farmers, the Gazette polhlg out, would lose everything and gain nothing if they failed lo grow grain as usual. The world eats bread and, must have it at all 005w- The most advanced countries prefer wheat flour bread and the best hard wheat is grown in Canada, largely on the prairies of the West. 'I‘hl5 has been proved on numerous oc- casions at lntemational shows. But the world docs not necessarily de- pend on Canada for its grain. a fart that a Canadian grain strike might quickly prove. The buyers at Liver- p601 wguld 5Q(',1re their wheat from other sources and the money i-aitl for it uouid go to the other zroin lands, both in Europe and the Am- ericas. The WYHDOETY emelStflwY created by the Canadian strike would be met and the countries that responded with their grain stores would simply add additional acreage to their prvdllfifli Elva-s- Thus the temporary advantage se- Cured by the grain-growers CISCWlZCTC would be made permanent to a cer- tain extent. The losers would be the Canadians. The lesson of u few years ps0 when the wheat pools withheld grain from the world mar- ket would be taught again with fur greater intensity. At that time wheat poured into the markets regflTd1°$ of the pools‘ attitude. The farmers of Western Canada have their 511111"! of common sense, which Shvllld be an assurance that there will be no general support ‘of the grain-seeding strike idea. EDITORIAL NOTES Everything is cheaper this ycnr and those who can at all afford t0 do so should buy more, giving the preference to home products, and then do something towards making 1933 a. more prosperous year. Fire losses in Canada for the year up to December 4 are reported to be $25,112,565 as compared with $29,132,234 for the snme wrlod in 193i. The improvement ls consid- erable, but the loss remains formid- able, especially when it is consider- ed that most of tlzc fires are due Gatehouse in Olerkenuell. mndon. to welcome-sl- NOTES BY THE WAY We have our rudisnls, snys an ex- change, radicals cl the type whose crztzczszn is purely; destructive and ievuititicrary, but they are relat- iu" ivlv in numbers and even wualzer 1n prersugc. Their appeals tune, for the most part, fallen on deaf ears, thus emphasizing the stability of the Canadian charm- fer and the well-grounded belief that our people have in the efficacy o! gradual, rather than violent and hurried, movements to bring about reforms. Aildressing the District superin- y-Qdclils o: the Soldier Settlement Board of Quintin in Ottawa on lMonday, Hon. W. A. Gordon, Min- ister of Labur said "there isn't an iablc-bodl-d y-vunp man in Canada ‘who if he has the courage cannot |stait out. lr-un ‘the cizies into our boundless areas. make good, and awn part of it." .\1r. Gordon added that 3,700 farmers placed 0n $116 land under the Soldier Settlement scheme, illlil paid for their farms in full. He advised adventurous young men to ‘turn sway from “l9 urban centres and build up homes for themselves u-iuere they would be secure agausi, 1iweriy, starvation and relic-f. ' The London Times says: “The quarrel between Japan and Chm-ll mcr l\.'.'rllll‘lllliiii is not the result of a sudtkn lllll‘illllf‘l'ili0 net 0n the part of one of the disputanis. No doubt the forward movement of the Japanese Army in September of last ye and its subsequent occu- potion ul lrrcitlory more than twice the sum of France, have actually produced the present crisis; but fundamentuiiy the difficulty arises from a rivalry of races which, l5 events lll \vl~.stvrn Europe also shgw, is of all differences the least easy to (‘0:ilpu.se." Was there n scornfnl sneer in l recent mention oi the fact that life insurance is.uo longer sold by agentS but by "estac oonvcrs-ationists?" For two years the ironic Obfiflfvfi" of that curious annual, the business man, have derived unfailing amuse- ment from his attempts at verbal beauty. Unclertnkers have become morticiuns, real estate agents have become rcaliors. press agents have become counsels on public relations, plumcers have become sanitary en- gineers, and in general selling has become service and instalment buy- il£l5 become the ilnancznl equal- 10“ plan. Such reaclungs out for . r and shinier words, if they cull for criticism at all, would be properly attacked by the conserva- tu-uy minded, for whom the swd old words of their fathers are good enough. ' ing One rcmon why Mussolini is able l.» maintain lllS dlctaiorship 0V4?!‘ Italy is perhaps to be found in his common sense. An afannirlll 1n‘ rr-zklc in homicide in recent years izas b (‘ll counruhelecl by the Ital- Lin premier with the restoration to the [zonal cutie of the death penalty for llillYdil‘. Rienwvzrl of that crime from the lisi, of (‘flllltfll punishment ulmcxs mo]; plan: below his ud- wu‘. tn oiilCr, in the days when '.\'~.\k govxt1iiiicnks, who listened to the clfimor oi’ impractical theorists, uzro rapidly reducing the nation t0 chaos. Tiu- must. precious life in the battle grrvvind of European mlitics wday, says n Landon exchange, is the iiie of ITOid-lliinhal President von llllill‘ zzhurr lie stands like a. rock in no mun laud of German poll- tics. rlatmnail sentiment, pride and ' rge centre round the aged dent, who is eighty five. He holds bar-k l\~ chops, anarchy and rrvl1i.i:n1 which would fall upon the irfrlicled Fatherland. He is Car- lylels conception of a, man. Hinden- burg is u monarchist who is hold- ing up a tottering Republic. He is a great irulitaigv chief who is keeping the 1i::icc._1~lc is u statesman amidst an lirmy of politicians. He has won by sheer integrity of character the respect of millions of his onetime enemies. If llinzlirnbilrg drove up Plcazlilly he would have a thunder- ing reception. "If tho men were fnr the most part "ihc real unemployed." had they any right to call themselves "hunger innrrlrcrs?" I do not be- lieve ll." says Godfrey Eiotn in Everything. (London) "I have been hungry myclf, really hungry. I was one of the garrison of Kut, which was starved into surrender affcr ilvo mouths‘ siege. And none o! Llzat garrison could have marched live miles, much less five hundred. No starving man could march half way from Glwgow to the border, much less from Glasgow to London. It often happened in Kut that burly men would fall flat in the tr nches through slicer weakness, when it was only a matter of strolling into the ncxt bay but one. The stalwart The Christmas fllbat Return Q Mb? I of Quurs By amei . Barton. M.D. EAT FOCUS INCH 1N MHQEKALS AND VITAMINS DURING COLD WEATHER- (Montrefl-l Gillette) Wu have but to read the original story and remark the circumstances under which it made its BPPBRIB-n" to understand what this “ return" signifies. The advent of the new ovangel took place at a time when the Csesarian registry of nations in subjection to Imperial Rome was ordered. At that moment the thoughts of the lordly of the earth 1; you a" o; avenge weight and ‘were turned towards a. great census 11nd ma; you put on n" m. mo" ‘and mobilization of the militant. pound, ma“; m, w“ wean". material and political forces 1t don't let these few pounds give you file" mum-ud- The Pomp o! 1m- any concern. It‘ is only natural that you should eat more food during the oold wea- ther as that body of your; needs more fuel, more food u keep it warm. Duringthe warm weather food must also be eaten to keep your body warm, but not as much is needed as you do not lose heat from the body so easily, you feel more like moving around, more like taking exercise. During the warm weather there is not the same desire for exercise. Thus the cool weather makes you want to eat more food, and eat more of the rich foods-meat, rich desserts, and fatty foods. As your appetite leads you to eat more food during the cool weather, the amount needed to keep you warm, and to supply that required by the extra exercise, ls usually eaten without any thought on your part. i However one thing is apt to be overlooked and that is the need for vitamins and minerals. Dr. L. Jean Bogart points out that the body needs just as much of the vitamins and minerals dur- ing the cold weather as at other seasons of the year, just at the time when the foods which supply the minerals and vitamins (fruits, vege- tables, eggs and butter) are espec- ially scarce and high priced. For this reason many people get a. re- duced supply of these necessary food eEements in the winter months and often begin to show evidences of vitamin shortage by Spring (poor appetite and indigestion, decreased vigor and resistance to infections, pains in the legs and Joints and so forth.) These are the symptoms which formerly called for the "Spring tonic", but now we lmow that it is better to get the tonic out of the grocery basket than from the drug store. Dr. Bogert suggests that the fol- lowing precautions be followed so that you'll be sure to get suflicient minerals and vitamins during the cold months. (l) Use larger amounts of the few fresh vegetables and fruits av- ailable. l (2) Use larger amounts of canned or dried fruits and vegetables. (3) Use larger amounts of whole milk and cheese, especially if eggs and butter are too expensive for the purse. (4) Use some vegetables raw which usually ure cooked. (5) Use more whole groin pro- ducts. ‘ <6) Add a little vitamin in con- centrated form if necessary, such as cod liver oil, tomato juice, oranges, bananas and yeast extract. The Bethlehem Epic (Exchange) Swcclcnborg was wont to say that God's angels are everlasiingly young. The phrase might well befit the Christmas festival. It is old, yet ever new. Fashions change; governments run their course; civ- ilizations rise and fall; old land- marks are removed and empires de- cay. Yet the Christmas tradition remains with us, and each succes- sive age extends its range of influ- ence. It is like the evergreen hol- lies and firs which exhale a subtle odor, a fresh breath from the over- lastlng hills. The forest primeval seems haunted by Yuletide dreams. There is a. strange hush of solemn expectancy which falls on the world when the great day arrives, a sense akin to the quiet blinking of the stars and the landscape blanketed by the deep soft-fallen snows. Tennyson, in the “Morte d‘Arthur" epic, tells how, after n Christmas Eve wassall beside the sparkling Yule-log, the night filled with dreams of good old Christmas cue,- toms: "A hundred bells rang clear through tho mist,’ ‘tellingpf the new Christmas morn. ‘The sunshine of far-back perished summers, after sleeping for countless millennium in the Yule-log, afresh leaps forth with genial‘ blaze. Hence before the cheery hearthflre primitive men offered their devotions and pledged each other in friendship. It was and bawllng a marching song were not hungry as i once knew hunger. mew were not. in any sense that matters, hungry at all. To label them hunger marchers‘ was a lbicl upon the most humane civilization in the young men I saw in one of tbs contingent atePPlEB luatlly forth would." perial paganism attained its climax .in a grandiose display of earthly power and glory. There must have been plenty of literature which wore the aspect and bore the stamp If Caesar-fan councils, material of strident pitch and crlard vehem- ence, with all loud-sounding pipes unstopped. And yet, somehow, the babel- Another reason for eating rnoreichows made m, music. when the f°°d l“ the w‘! wwth" l" ‘hiityright note came to earth, it came in a way men knew not and in u. fashion they never dreamed. It came by the sheen o! a star, from the lips o f angels, and through the face of a. little child cradled amid the stable and the straw. It came when the stars returned to candle service, guiding pilgrims across desert simdsr when shepherds re- turned to their night watches tend- ing their lowly flocks; when two wayfnrers returned from Nazareth to the lowly plains of Bethlehem, their ancestral home. It came when the princes of merchandise sought iodgment in a wayside hostel, and when in that crowded khan a mother sought some grotto wherein to lay her first-born child. We are told she "wrapped him in swod- dllng clothes and laid him in a manger." Then it was that a. glory fell roundabout the field workers upon tho Syrian hills, and the hush of Chrfstmastide fell softly o'er the rough world, broken only by the clarion tones of heavenly messen- gers chanting, “Glory to God in the Highest, and on earth peace, to all meen of goodwill." Which thingsp we are told, the angels themselves‘ “desired to look into"; and one writer has interpreted this very sen- tence as equivalent to saying that the angels “broke a window of Heaven" to inlet upon our poor earth the glory-gleam of that we call the Christmas story. In short, amid the superficial pomp and glitter of nations at the climacteric of their material pride, gave the primitive sign of the humanities once more, and what Caesarian mandates, trampling, legions, and hectoring sntraps could not effect by way of bringing men buck to their true heritage and blrthrightmwan done‘ by a‘ ‘Simply straight Blanca of God's own clean sunshine through a cobwcbbed window into a stable, where it lit up the face of a mother and her child. Is it not also worth while to note that this Christmas story was Jot- the first essay of the Christmas spir- it, for the memorial of home clust- ers nbout the fireside. This linking-up of life with pri- mal things is eminently character- istic oi.’ Christmas tradition, itself ever "true t0 the kindred points of heaven and home." And nowhere is this truth moregraphically illus- trated than in the Bethlehem story which oomes up from the Judcan plains. It is the noblest find most beautiful tribute to the Christmas spirit ever penned. No other ro- mance can equal it, nor hold a candle to it, for all after versions are as far below the sweet grace and awesome beauty of this origi- nal idyll as the glow-worms glim- mer is below the clear brightness oi.’ a radiant slur. Yet the Bethlehem epic is a simple story, o. homestead story, o. recital reminiscent of the earliest pastoral poetry of our race. It is poised and natural, and mark- ed by the some sort of spiritual beauty as its own expressive sym- bols, thestnrry glory and music from angelic lips. There ls no straining effect, but a picture which tells the story of religion even bet- ter than the rarest works of art and superior to the decrees of councils or the manuals of Christian creeds. NOTICE We wish to draiw your at- tention to our exchange sys- tem. For instance, you ma) have something that In too largo or toosmall. Another ' thing, you may nave a huf- fa-lo that you don't need. We have a fur coat that you do need, etc. We are open to buy or ex- change skates and boots, sep- arate or attached, men's units, cloth and fur coats, tools and rubber goods of all descrip- tlonn. Everything must be ‘in sea- nonablo and saleable shape. Second lland Store Phone 889. 108 Rirhmcnd St. 130143-3343], We FROM "OLD YULI SONG” The Horn again! agafnl In the winter night When stars are bright, It shaken the frosty pine: Tho banner wave: upon the rood. It stirs s sire’: forgotten blood, And starts the sullen vein: It lifts the dog's ear breathlesly; Ho moans, and listens restless]?- The Horni qalhi again! Follow! follow! 0'er hill and hollow, Where never deer was ta‘enl By vale and wood, o'er strenm and flood, Give back the phantom strain! The mellow mouth is deep and worn. And dim the carving round the Horn Where rnisfhty hands have lain, Courting the ag-ed finger-tips- Sound it aloud with trembling lips! The Horn! again! again! -A. M. Buclrton. . ‘On hearing a distant Horn. ted down by no Quirlxial official go- ing the rounds with his servitora, ready with their waxen tablets and stylus, but was written by a lowly, thoughtful and scholarly doctor, Lucas by name, to whom the short and simple annals of the poor linked together the ages and linked in with the voices of the prophets who long ago had proclaimed, “And thou, Child, shalt be called the pro- phet oi.’ the Highest, for thou shalt go before the face of the Lord to prpeare His ways "7 Ten Beautiful Words (Exchange) lvlr. Funk, poet and lexicographer, has apparently read the 2,757 pages of the standard Dictionary (we suppose that would be his choice because be publishes it) 1n search of the ten most beautiful words. Reading a. page ‘of n. big dictionary occasionally is a. not unprofitable amusement. It is said that Sir Wil- frid Laurier used to indulge in the pastime. It humbles your pride by exposing the poverty of your voca- bulary; sometimes You run across a page in which nearly all the words are perfect strangers; some- times you see a good word which for some reason you have over- looked. Sharp~tongued parliamen- tarians may find delight in a. word which is vltnperatlve but not un- paxliamentary. But when even a lcxicographer picks out ten words and declares that they are the most beautiful, we have our doubts. The beauty of the word is not always indicative of beauty of thought. Brawn, for instance, has a. sound as melodious as dawn, which is one of Mr. Punk's favorites, and mush is n5 melodious as hush: wallaby, which falls as pleasantly on the ear as lullaby, is described in the dic- tionary as one of the smaller ma- cropodlne kangaroos. The lust word runs nicely off the tongue, but does the kangaroo run in a graceful wny? Luminous is not much more beautiful than ruminate, which sug- pests the homely practice of the domestic cow. Chimes sounds not unlike chines, defined as parts of the backbone of an animal with the adjoining flesh or parts. Diverging from Mr. Punk's list, we find that ‘ sinner is a. rather more melodious wo‘d than saint A Idas For Christmas Gifts _.._-_ FOR HIM Military Brushes Ivory Shaving Sets Yardley‘: Shaving Set Cow's Shaving Set Potter a Moore Shaving, Set Pipes Lighten Cigarette! Tobaccoa F_OR HER Toiletware in beautiful Gift Sets Manicure Sets Yardley‘! Toilet Sets Ashes of Roses Toilet Sets llouhilant Toilet eta Coty’: Toilet Sets Evening In Paris Tollet Sell Gay Puree Toilet Set! Vanity Cues, Perfume, Atomlzeru, Dusting Powder, Bath Salts, etc. , A complete neaortmenl of Molra XXX Chocolate: In Fuloy Gift Packllos, also in Cedar Cheek. Drop In nod nee our display of GIFT SUGGESTIONS THE 2 IMBS 149 Greet Coorle 8t. DEC 193; ‘flit! d JOE y SAYS-- ' l! a good m a n thrives» all thrive with him. ‘An inexpensive Gift which will PLEASE Those who have not already sent us, their list kindly mention their own expiry date. This will prevent any delay in pre- paring our Christmas mailing list. The Bharlottetown Guardian PHONE 188 i /‘ , . , . S i; search through the dictionary Blow-dropping veils of thing would no doubt disclose many mob lawn did g0; cases, if a-nybody though; it wmtb And ma, mm’ waver-mg lfQhfI" while. Handsome is a5 handsome _ shadows broke. does, is a; true of words as of per- Rolling a slumber-one sheet of 1 suns. Still, we would not discourage below the quest forbeauty of language, They saw the gleaming river m but we would .| commend a reading ‘card flow of the English classics rather than From the inner land; far off thllt of tht dictionary. The Elilyabethans, mountain tops, who knew little if anything of dio- Three silent pinnacles of up tionaries, had a sense of music in snow, stood sunset-flushed: and dam with shorwery drops Up clomb the shadowy pine alum the wven copse. words which has never since been equaled. What charm lies in‘ Ham- let's description of the rising and setting sun: This brave derhanglng firmament, this mnjestical roof fretted with golden fire." Golden, by the way i; one of Mr. Funlrs se- lected garland 0f beautiful words. To take a. more modem instance read Tennysonb Intos Eaters, say| In prose mere is a goodly comr puny of those who are plaster; -. the art of wedding beauty or p ctsion of thourrhi to filling in guage. We may not hope to emu this Stalin: late them. but it_ is profiizibll‘ ' compwe our awkwardncss w? A land of streams; some like a their grace. downward smoke, " There Are Many New. Thingsy We Are Sure Will Delight You In Gar Showing of ‘i’ cHmsmAs GIFTS _.__.._,_.___i.__ An exceptional display of Perfumes, Toilet Waters, IP-ucc Powder: and Compacts in Combination Sets and singly. Christmas Chocolates in the lending makes beautifully boxed for the holiday tr...1 Smokers Goods in Pipes, Tohaccos, Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco Pouches, Gigantic and Cigar Cases, Smokers Sets, etc. Parisian Ivory 'l‘ol1c\ and Manicure Sets, Boudoir Lamps, Brushes, Combs, Mir- rors, Photo Frames, Perfume Bottles, Trays, etc., in various colors. ~ Other articles include, Waterman: Fountain Pens and Pencils, Walking Sticks, Thermos Bottles and Lunch Kits. Cameras, Ladies and Gents Travelling Sets and Cases, llot _, Water Bottles, Rolls, Glleth and Auto Strop Safety Razors. ‘ Shavers Sets, Playing Curdmyetc. We want you to look over our offerings. Now is the time to make your selections. a E. A. FOSTER- i? CENTRAL DIRUGSTOBB ' HEADQUARTERS FOR CHRISTMAS GIFTS mcuiveuicuotsoivs LACK TWIST it ‘FIIA@@@