FEBRUARYJB. 134; {é I r7’ I . Patient lDruggnsll Doctor I e . your we n an r h?‘ gllitlbailflh. "A": bu"? yolgtmd (B The OI Mil P have the but in mlmllcanm‘ y “s, "S All ch11‘: an obtained from the mWNm- m’- "- most rella 1c moron. Our Sonic: , 3M“ c‘ a ca: be relies] uoon, Lind both ohon: < °l Be itilrammail o er: race vc best nttcn lMme on m Alderman: 32 All all night phone service u at ' Amm Gold .01 your dismal. We dispense bru- A0810 Cdri .59 orlptlon: from any Doctor. Leave Anelo Hur 2,50 Ill your no! . grlrtlltéfxleld i912 14 - t J. Ernest H. Worth given-Id oi 1-4 DRUGGISTS 353a,?‘ Lag 1'1 Phone az. u: Prince st. Blew“ ca 1-2 - Bralorne 9:15 ii BTOUI-Bn flfl -— - _ __ _ Burl Ank 4,19 P Bunk Hill m 1-] C81 Edm 1.26 Cdn Mal 50 S CQTKbOO 2.75 Cent Pat 1:70 Chesterv L30 -% Smelter; 35 1-3 Igglylifiets; 1.35s 1-2 [vlontreal Stock New York Stock ligenison .33 1-2 3mg Duquesne .12 East M811 2.61 Exchange Exchange M m geed .04 1-4 ——'* —"—‘ m an o4 (B). 11w Canadian Press) (By The Canadian Press) pmd-écoeul: 37 Gr: In e .29 - °‘°'° M‘ - “"1 8312*“ 1t o: 1* O Bell in “S iii ti; ‘T’ “i? in " 3'" M‘ Ga" ~11“ Can cit Found 22 H A c 2d 12g él-g Gunner .26 1-: can Car pid 5 311mg, Bi“ H ' HBJUIUW .0! 3-4 w, PQC 23 B“ dmnA ° 1-4 Help Rock no 5 (‘SQ 2‘ k2 B3‘ "éwv 33 5'8 Hollmger 12 7-8 D5, 553g m ch11 a; (lm “I? lnohic oil 1.82 Dom czol d 25 cs1 o o 39 1'4 lrisp M 24 mm Bulge 7 M grungdeg 64 5-5 mt Nickel 32 3-3 pomstecl B ‘ M é? A 011m“ 21 1-4 Jack Wai .17 mm, l2 w W’ 28 I Kerr Add 3.20 How 5mm, u 7 a Gen Elec 31 1-8 yrk ‘92 T b 32 1-4 Gen Motors 41 5-8 Lay“. Show 19 Nickel 2 3-8 c-t,N<>r d 23 lLeltch so Massey Hams 1'2 Keimem t 31 34 Little LL 1.72 MQCQH Frontenac 24 1'2 Mm" ward 35 7'3 MacLeod 1.80 N“ Brew 3g - N?‘ Central l2 1-4 Madge/n _54 mtstcel Car N-r Am 0o 15 lMiiliirt-c 9c Nora-ids 51 4 P?" RR 33 54 McKenzie 1 l5 ahivuhigih is 1. Phil Pet (‘w 36 1- McVittie .06 gtuiw com 2 Std 011 {U 34 iMcWatters .21 St LBW pm l5 1-2 ‘Texas Corp 35 5-8‘ Min Cpn 55 steel cf Cim pltd 67 Unififid A11‘ 36 l Moneta .48 w“ Elec B 9° Us Rubber 13 3' l Morris .00 Us Sbttii C0 57 7-8‘ Ngmnda 5Q 3-4 Vanni-Wm 27 Nmmetal , .32 |_- t k y“: one ii l1». on i! °° - '0Brien .80 Omega .11 1-2 Pamzurt j- ; a Paymas er . 1-2 MONTREAL. Feb. 1'i—<<2iP>—- Gran‘! Pei-mi 1.50 1! prices were not estabished pick Crow 266 any todfl)’ (mmylegwfiagmwiglrfis- Pioneler 2.12 l Dominion v ' "_“_ Powel .80 plgited. Pr" s m other kinds were. CHICAGO.’ lfiflb- la-(AP); presto“ 275 lbcut sica . M" Wm“ d*°1 "td a c5211 “J71 ' Qucmcnt 04 Early sale-g of steers were at $5 iolgest sitgoe 36D. 21. V ‘3 5t An; 1Q 1.2 to $1.35. Cows and the few steers B11 s}?! gnbefh cmwm“ ‘W’: Sari Ant 215 told were at steady przces. Hezfers new lJWs hm‘ t e 1588-83.: inkflil; a er 54mm” '39 ringed from s4 t» $7.15. Good cows zeneral w fat rce -1 1w _- {y- Shem" A70 brought $5.75 to $6315. mwtly $6 t1 Wm" W" 14- 1'9 l-W"; Siscoe .54 $5.53, merium $4.15 t» $5.75 and May '18-'18 1-8- July '13 1- —'13- slave Lake} .17 gjmmin $4.25 to $4.50. Canners com 7-8—1_ 1-8 down. May 59 3-8, Steep Rock 97 and cutters $3 to $4 11105111’ $350 Juli’ 59 1”‘- °at5 3'4 d°w3~ Straw Lake .03 7-8 ,0 535i Good bulls br-ughg $5475 Com prices were the lowest s nce simrgeon J7 tosdfio and c mmori $4.25 to $5.50. late in December and oats weare Sullivan 5-7 1,3 Riceipis: cattle.‘ 513g; calves, 501; tne lowest since early in N-vembx, sylvamte 26,, dice .101: hogs , "_'—‘ ' ‘Peck Hughes 325 Cigves wzze "tea/sly to firm. Vials WINNTPEG- F1?”- n-jicp)" Tzburn 1'10 mged "Cm g9 {,0 $12. G~od qualzty Msdcrate buyng by Canadar. and ‘ Ucm 39 V8215 fllflfe $11.50 w s12. M'd1lm1 United Steins 1111115 held whee‘ Upper ca». 1.39 this trm $10.50 to $11. Cqmmon “$111195 Siffldy ti-Tflmd Pfevliilf wane Am“ 2,50 mm ‘(mt-S $9 1O 5m Drjnkm-s $5 closing levels thR-UQIIOUE today- w" H“; 650 o $8.50. GraFsefs $4.15 t: s5. Winnipeg 8'31" "wimmle- Valli“ Ymir .06 1-4 b» ware steady at $10 for a finished 1'3 093W 11181193 MBY 85 w. and “them, 7'7 and July '18 5-8 cents a bushel. UNUSTED Burks ailr’ crlnmwi duality lambs Ellen“ M"! 1'51"" Tana-lied were s8 to s9. Two hct house lambi "Wiihanged- Pawnee .01 Wwilrc ircllp" 50 ponn-‘s each ~ Pcnd _Or¢-. 150 were s-‘d at $12 each. Sheep were ti to $6. FINANCE by Frederick Gardner ted Prrs: Financial Writer NEW YORK. Feb. 1’l—(AP)— Tit stock market continued its crczpiig rally tcday with leaders ticking cll gains of fractions to a Pillli. 01' S , ‘Giiiu and 10.2505 were equally_ dllribiivd about the Canadian lst. Dslillsrs Seagram, Ford and Inixriil oil cased. Dome Mines. lyalkers and Hcllingcr comprised the fruwvrd trend. The Assccatlrd Press average of l0 UiCCki hold a not advance o1 .2 °ifl 11ml ht 40.3. ‘Irarislts-rs of 356.720 shares were unong the imiillest for a full session since Sept. it» Tilt-y compared with 9:13.140 1ft Frday ulhzle quotaticns tock fi-Bir éihiflrcsl. ncsc-dive shoe Nov. Stocks mlerging on the u ide included US. steel, Bethlelhsem. Yomiléi-yvn Sheet, sahta "re. Great Ncrthern. Chesapeake d: 0-0. General Mot-ms, Chrysler. Ammmtia- UYft-"d Aircraft. Gen- "ti Elcctrir Dll Prtnt, Alled Cheni- l. Scars Roebuck. Internavonal Harv gig _ mcartcghilliivn Carbide and Am BANKS _ . _______ tBv The cannot-ii PICS!) “h Clerc “mime 150 Toronto Exchange TORONTO. Fklb. 17~(CPJ— Pric s advanced but trad ng lag-god t day on the Toronto exchange. Volume for the day was 135,- 000 shares, the smallest in several weeks with a single exception. Action in Preston was st mulated in the early sassion b the news that an extra dlvldcii wculd be paid with the regular disti-ibuton and the price finned to 2.85. Offer- ingg in the afternoon wee fairly plantiful and the pace slipped back to 2.75 for a net loss 1-! 4 cents. Narrow net losses were collected also by Francoeur, Iiitntie Long Lac. Northern Canada. Powelll Ruyon and Teck Hughes. Butfalo-Ankerite was in demand and the rice firmed 25 cents t) 4.10 an I-lolltngir arid Lake Shore added fractions. Wlmght-Har- grooves closed 15 cents up at 6.50 and gains olt 4 to 10 cen s were net- ted ‘ny Kerr-Addiscil, Anglo-Hur- onian, Alrnor. Caitboo. East Mrlar- tic Kirkland Lake. McKenzic, Min- lng Coiporattcn, Perron and To- rn Gains o! 1-2 to 7-8 were netted by Nomndo, Nickel and Smeltera and in the cheaper group closin! Drive‘ were narrowly lower for Falcon- bridge. Non-metal and Steep Rsck. H1119 0i] and Calgary-Edmon- ton finished 2 cents up. International Petroleum and Bri- tish American Oil added 1-8 to ‘1-4 and other interlisted leaders dozrig better werewBgli Telephone, Brasil- ian, CPR... Masey- and H1!‘- am Walkers. Closing prices were up for Great lakes Paper pod“ Canada Cement pod" Canadian Our fd., Consoli- dated Bakeries. Dcm nion l" und- ries, United Steel and Rogers- Majestic. “wit: kill; “m, m Mlnard‘: relieves :prnin:._ Minimum Charge for Any gflllrfll Guardian locnh, 5c act-w um“??? Announcerrcn ‘Q ezgctlgitan. 70c Advertising llatos _ Payablo In Advance nd Coming Event: 8c per word: "M," Pr! Word: In Mcmortam Notice: 10c per inch: Lllt: of cud ‘Ind Spiritual Olltiflflfl. Clrdl, elm, 5c per name: Letters of Ind fom" 70c per lnrli Wedding engn rnent 40 words for $1.00 A" tent: for every additional 3 vvo a. Notice: ol-Thanks and [er Inch or 4c per word. Lists of Sub-crlptlonr ‘nmnuon r Inch. Address and Prelentltlon 81.00. Other rates on Advertllent: l5 Cent: ord; Wutern and Eutern local: Sflesmen Wanted “T!!! cxran IENCI a L . Whfgftndle line D A u n oiiial~fron A Lmifi- m T0 Let Boarders Wanted Naif)‘; ‘lithium FRONT noon snolvr counsa sruocurs 10-’ hum’ h kitchenette. 3 Kin commodoted. Apply 233 Rich-~ L-4B-2-l8-l . mond St. Ir27-I-17-2i. i» hiiitteiimtit 'i°£§‘i"ti“= *——-——""—‘ mnsntllg warehouse“. were" m‘ Male "Clp wflflted WANTED - BARBER APPBENT- ices. No former experience neces- sary. Write for information. Molar Barber College. Halifax. N433. Female Help Wanted‘ Montreal Curb (By The (Inudian Jrcss) Stocks C105‘? Abltibi Md 4 1~2 Asbcstos 15 1-4 BA Oil 16 Bralihnnlols 9 1-2 Bntiiurst A li Din A 25 Fraser V T C <7 ord A l5 1-2 Hir Walker 39 Imp Oil o 1-4 rm. Pote l!’- 4-4 Price com 9 1-2 Produce Prices MONTREAL. Fri). 17—tCPl—- Pnduce Market pliers hire today. as rerportzd by the Dommlon De- partment of Agriculture, follow: Butter: first grade crenmery prints, Jobbing’ price. 33 1-2-34; first grade solids. 15mm‘! iT-‘ice, 3-1 _33 1-2; Quebec no 1 pasteurized. regretted ivholesaio price, 32 1-2— 32 3-4; Qucbec no 2, rcgradcd, 31 3-4 Cheese: Western white and c11- ored. wholesale price. for eXnort. 14. Current receipt price. Western orcd, 14 3-16. 1-2: A-medium 19 1-2-20 A- grade 1'! 1-2-48. Potatoes: White no 1 '75s 55—65; no 2, .45—.50; NB mountain no I 75's .65--.'10; PEI c bblers no 1 75's 315-80: PEI mountain n0 1. 315- .85. Bermuda reds no 1 50's 1.50. Currencies NEW YORK. Feb. l’l—(CP)-'I'he Canadian dollar stepped up briskly ‘ on the tree foreign exchange mar- ket hcrc today. advancing 1 l-l l cents to 85 cents. Dcalcrs n ttd that in the existing t-hin market the ratc was sensitive to what normally would be comldered small bus ness. (Ottawa Foreign Exchange Can- tml Board rate 9.09-9.91 oer emf- disoount.) . The Hon Kong dollar rose 1-10 cents t 24. 8 cents and the Shang- hai dollar 1-10 cent to 581 ccnts. B m units have been moving up for days. Money brokers said the move primarily is speculative and ravlded only a minor check to the {bug-term flow of Far Eastern bal- | nnccs t~ the United States which btiml at the cii-tbrcak of the war. The p und Sterling cloud at $4.03 1-4 for open market cables. MONTREAL, no. l'l—(CP)—'I‘h_e stock market plot-ted m“ erratc course today. opening l ly, suf- rering a striking cpel and then closing steady. Volume was the rill; (IHARLOTTETOWN » GUARDIAN Greed and Gumplion A message from The Newspaper Publishers Committee HON. W. A. BUCHANAN, CHAIRMAN HERE aren’t many wholly unselfish people outside of insane asylums. And you and I can be thankful for this! It is human nature to be selfish. The very will to live is selfish; the desire to succeed, to win the respect of our fellows, to make the world a better, safer and pleasanter p1ace— all that is just a combination of greed and gumption. Just a recognition that, in order to live, we must let live —-or must even help others to live better! Merchants and manufacturers who advertise in news- papers, naturally are looking mainly at their own interests too. A conversation with a typical one went like this . . . “Why do you spend money for advertising space?” he was asked. “I don’t spend money ‘that way. I save it,” he t answered. “If there were any cheaper ways to tell people about my goods, I’d try them.” “Then what: do you do with the savings?" was the next question. ‘I'd like to keep them,” he admitted. “But: mostly I plow them back into the business. If I can reduce my prices and give better values, I get more customers." "And what do your competitors do?” “Oh, the smart ones do the same thing,” he repliedf “We all hunt steadily for ways to improve our products I i‘. I I then we can tell the customers a still better story and ‘perhaps move out a little ahead of the other fellows.” "Suppose you had the power to stop your competitors, do deny them the right to advertise, leaving the field to you, would you use that right?” He thought a minute and then gave this answer. “No. I would be tempted to do that if I could. But I'm too keen to get on to want to. My business would; go to seed. So would other businesses, in my line and other lines. Pretty soon I couldn’t sell my goods because there wouldxfl: be enough customers with good enough jobs to afford to buy my stufi‘. Then it wouldn't be long until I myself would have a hard time getting the new and better things I’d like to have. It: wouldn't work out!” “Then who loses when money is spent for advertising ~- good products?” be was asked. "Nobody loses,” he exploded. “Advertising ls just liko a better tool. When a man buys a million dollars’ worth of good tools for his factory and uses them to cave hi: customers a couple of million and to increase his payroll another couple of million and still manages to keep out enough to buy a shirt and pay his income taxes, nobody loses.” The manufacturer went his way without being told that he had missed an important part of the benefits of, using advertising as an economic tool . . . i You can call it your selfish part and mine. His adver- tising not only brings you and me new: of such things " -' ‘as good values, but it also pays a big part of the cost 70f gathering and publishing the news of the world by which you and I learn the facts we must have in order to keep ourselves free. . I don't know how you feel about this particular brand, .of selfishness. but: I like it! l v i i’ it NOTE: The Newspaper Publishers Committee, speaking through its chairman, will bring you one of these institutional advertisement: in this space each week. Clubs, patriotic ' " , Business firms or individuals who would like reprints may hove them by writing to the business office of this newspaper. .1 ii_ ft’ ‘3’.}’:§.'if.°.,,"“ u“ v g-laig-lo-ii. lightest for several srsslozis. A strong op t in the list was Nickel. which advanced a full point. While Noleinda firmed 3-4. New white checse. 14 1-16; western col-l W lows were recorded by Power Corp- oration. McCall Frontenac, Mas- sey-Harris, Winnipeg Electric "B" and Gatirieau Rights. lowcr levels were also t.uched by Inductrie Acceptance Cooperation and Imlpor- “‘%Pt§°$- t an Domin ge a were - - 5 m y, in Bum- mml-ilo“ °°=1.P"""- {X2 $2311 ‘§i‘l‘2l“‘§§o°,fh.‘é‘Zi§$‘i¢p3?-lt ed- mwefl“ on- md 03mm F11“ from different com ittees. The Catherine whm ‘Mrs we" ms‘m°'"se°' 51°“ °°mmm°° “i” “d “° 5M‘ Grade VIII-l. Charlie Currie. Grade VII (a)-1. while mm m“ cfiigiebeiim t: ked Y“ "WWY m c °“ reported a coal shovel, pane glass. 1-8 but Bathurso was behind 1-4 m d d f d math the 1111118; 3- Qlwflld GEOYWBW- hile can. lost an early fractional “d “° n” e °' u“ e OUT OUR WAY .rv~l the home of Mrs. Matthias Koughan for the January meeting. The Pre- gjdgnfi opened the meetin with 011181118 Creed. Fourteen members‘ answered calls made. The school committee stove. The program consisted 0i Eggs_ graded shipmflfls in “SM and unchanged in the face of some 1n wnvexatlom A very tastv lunch 1111118- . ___ selling pressure. free cases. seliinl at. A large 22 Total sales: mm sham‘; mdub was served by Mrs. Kcughan assist- Grade 171-4- Braul, roll call to be fl-HBWH- By J. R. Williams DONAGII WOMEN'S‘ INSTITUTE ed by an exchange valentines. _ — The singing of the National Anthem Donagh Womens Institute met at brought the mccung u; a dose, RINGWOOD SCHOOL the "ode and ripen in: the HOXIO! mu 101’ the month o! Jan- u . Lillian Mac- Grade VII (b) —1. Joyce Taylor; withstanding this isolation 011311805! ltnlirt. Montreal Power held steady two $0085 R1111 80cm 1131mm“ spent 2. John cui-rie; a. Ernest Mac- enjoys every Walter Currie; 2. and the telephone. But alhgat r1 ed by Viola Trainer. Next meevng hvuigechli/IMEI/bhemi . '- ll, 5,200; Mi , 9.000; BUGS. i h l M . BC 5 @111- mme" '7 "Fm B m“ w’ C Elicia. n” o hub? held u the om o rs Grade IV-l. Petr-eta White. l OUR BOARDING HOUSE Grade III-l. Noreen Taylor. Grade 11-1. Marie Taylor; 2 Linus AJchoi-n. Teacher. Florence Currie. THE LONELY CITY Report for January: Dougall. Olrle of the most isolated cities 2. Phyllis MacKinilon, 3. 5T3’. c "is Manaos in Brazil. on t-h< Rio Ne m.‘ not for from the sot Wilere his 2. Marjorie McDougall, s. river runs into the Amczon ‘Cavanagh. The nearest community tol Manacs is 1.000 m“.cs dstw‘ W. . 2, Lauren; Mchom. modern a:ii..li _\: i gas, electricity. cneml». l‘l ntrcsmDoiigall 2. Edscn Bilrdclt L-avem and wild beasts abound as soon as one leaves the city behind. ‘3-1‘ wsLLJi-isvizs so BOREIN 5E2 \ lT'5 Mooeramsrlc -- ALL ‘FHEV DO i5 Pur A BALE o’ HAY IN ‘EM AN cu-r "rl-l‘ WIRES ALBlNO seamen-i? AN UNUSUAL so WHAT'S COLOR, AN‘ I cc WHAT "rt-alum rusv STUFFED HIM -ro slams our ALL TH‘ cotorz / THEV couw ‘ \\\\. .\\\\\\'~““ y;- . - J Waite J‘ 6O voulaiz- ‘THE euv Wi-iO‘5 I BEEN QNKYCHlNGTl-le veil. I'VE 6am USING FOR A summer Au. win-ran!“ GIMME THAT CHUNK or cases OE CHINE Barons My ctaws COME our AND 1 GCRATCH AWPL? SPuTT-TTI? uotc HIM "mares, Mow woizo, MAogwi-liaz 1 Fi2isi< com ALARM me i-lis omen FOR ‘THE WHOLE HOUSEHOLD.’ OLD SAIL ‘MAT HANDS or: ME uzsr you FEEL. we iRE oi: AN AROUSED HOOPLE.‘ ‘SLAB LAST NtGHT I BLANKET luolcrmeur! K l-IQ PAGE FIVE ' ' "' ' 'T FALRVIEW SUHOOL Grade X-l. Malguerlte Mao- Grade IX-i. "Peggy" MacMillan Grade VII-l. Clifford Masada, Grade VI-t. Audrey MacMlllazu (Lode IV-l. Mary Mclsaac. G ado, III-Sr. 1. Chrsfey Mac- Grade III-Jr. 1. Rtmn Cnvanegh, Grade 1I-1. Gloria Burnett. eatdier: Freda Burdetl, With - ltlajor llooplc TAKE VOUR GENDNZME VANISHED r-‘QQM My ‘