There's stili time to ‘choose the gift she wants most-a genuine Bridal ' Wreath Diamond Ring with the only 4-point Guarantee of perfect color, cut, brilliance and flawless quality. At leading |ewcliers everywhere. Twelfth/loath C. W. PATTERSON JEWELLER- Great George Street GODKIN BROS. SUMMERSIDE, P, E, l, llridal Wreath Wedding Rings Remnants 0n Newi Posi-tiisr llomes 135.175 ~ ICPI -lt l lu interfere with the c. — and bunga- Ui l‘ \\\".'\. n1. l F, W. his average " '\'-" 1v inmc won't be of plastic. Won't bu. heated l cook rnenls " m1: ul‘ buttons. tiost-wai- hum? very like those of ‘ ' t . Nhnullstrator ' ‘u’! i ,‘ ' ' llnnlc ,. built omes may be pre- . anti prices izcnernliy governed by prevailing cun- ..~ var-t. reaciiiv fawcnst. is s‘itl hi l\--~- wine plans for what it ex-r t"~ ncst-vsrr inner wail 1.2, . ' rm- p. houses for . they would lg‘ of probable Diamond ard _ I . , '. Wrncoorsr NAME IILDIIIMONDS. ln a recent statement on post- war building probabilities. Mr. Nicolis‘ said there never was a time when so many new ideas and innovation; were being dc- veloped for building. There had been some “fantastic" publicity on what the post-Will‘ home would be like. v The “frcakish" house. rimmin- i112 ull sutrlzestions for housing improvement. would alwdys be lac- yond Illr! reach of thc average ‘man The feeling that they might be able to obtain such homes cans l many persons to postpone OWPiYIII or sulillress their desire to own u new modern hz-znc. PERIVIII-T LIGHTED TREES FREDERIUFON, Dec. 15 -——(CP) »- Lighted Christmas trees may be placed on verandahs oi‘ New Brunswick homes this vcnr but they will not be allowed on lawns. D. W. Wallace. Deputy Di- rector of Civilian Defence in the province. stated today. LONDON —- (C?) — Princess Elizabeth will play tine role of Aladdin in the pantomime at Christmas. Princess MallZaret will plcy t-hc princess and the other rcles will be taken bv friends of the pAIIICESSGS and 25 boys and girls chosen frcm a school in the corntry. and Furs: lb .. I00 per tent. Lt-Poople who sell this .- ,-,-.- new‘ so received. Ti) ALI. RANC AND TRAPPERS ‘l0 Reasons Why You Should Ship Your FoII L-People who sold last yéar lost as much as IL-The market is gelling alronfl" W911! 40H- 4.--CasIi advances — mode some lime furl 07¢ ERS year are bound to lose. ilan Travoi in iihlna Despite 77 Months 0f War r u s. rauuswosru " “:1 m... sun wnm) mum‘ “in (Dela 0d) — - 1'5 ‘ t0 t, ruport system. after 7'1 n32». '5 war. is badly bent but “nfifi “'2”? on o war bortagonpfcsoilities. while obvious in o Junkysruyiglugets and battered rlc - ihas, is even more noticeable in .he course of nearly a 1900-01119 air, land and waterwa . out. correspondent now on. Befou our iourncy to the fllht- ing front is ended. our party will ridden on shallow-draft sailboats. horses snd sedan choirs. poration nuts from the United States by lend-lease. f‘- ‘ “ the -- of replacement of whole planes and Darts. the C.N.A.O. is runnind an excellent service. both domestical- ly and to India. Except for the fuelling done on the other side of Burma. all the gasoline for service ha‘ to flown into Chin Occasionally way cur party of correspondents and military attache“ new signs of war's outright destruction and damage-locomotives and freight cars knocked apart by Japanese bombs and slrbome cannon. and railway buildings scarred by old attacks. But the war’: greatest effect on this railway is the wear and tear that was not readily visible, euch as the washiness in steel rails un- der long pounding. The coal available in IPree China is soft and of poor quality, thus further handicapping rail- woy Dower. The railways even lack the DYOPCr lubricants. They use vegetable oil Yet the railways are carrying on. moving freight and passengers on the basis of military needs first. This means turning gon- dola: and box-cars into passenger coaches. Despite the high fares. there is always a considerable number of civilian passengers. They come to the stations hours ahead of train time. sit In the cold amidst mountainous luggage to Win DIECEQ in the hard-seated third-class coaches or even on flat-cars. Allies Bold To Balkan Peace Feelers and will also have walked s con- Anny-Ire Rllowll. mo; nulrd latgvewho now is in London Inoowo Taxes for- Auxiliary Services ivmr 14 -(0! Cobra auxiliary so gizsufsnsdlsa f w-Ea tn the principal fighting w“ Bllvatim to meet Col. J1». Del Min- rseu may suthoritiés re- mmended to Ottsws that the Wiierviaora treated u-my msonnel for purposes o? income service pormnnei overseas us y no e . Auxiliary services o ficifl‘; zflnliht “:3! fieltw h ti“ sx was s: c supervisors because they shared the forces‘ m“ hardships. “gainer-Egg! nlipaxvicors with s0 film-- with the R..C_AJ'. snd 10 with the Royal Canadian Nov . They received $6 50 s day. equival- ent to on army captain's ply, War Makes liomo Nursing imperative With the ever-growing shortage of doctors and nurses throughout Canada the teaching of Home Nursing by tho St. John Ambul- ance Association has beccme ur creasingiy important and the number of classes and attendance has been on the upgrade for sev- eral months. To keep teaching methods and manuals in line \vith vlsory Committee of the Associa- to go over the entire field of training and instruction. All Home Nursing closes now are con- ducted under the St. John-Red Cross Joint Committee The Nursing mittee of St. John Lieut- Col E. L. Smellie, Matron in Chief, R. C. _ M C, Miss Maude H Hall, Acting Supt, V. O. N! Asst. Supt. of Nurses. Ottawa Civic Hospital: Miss Marlon Lindeburg, President of the Can- adian Nurses Association: Dr- T. B Bain, Dept. Pensions and Health; Dr. T, H Leflett, Sur- Freon in Chief of St. John; Mrs Thomas Gfimcrc. Lady Supt. in Chit-f of St Jchn and Miss Edith Fenian, lChief Nursing Officer of consists of WASHINKYLLJN, Dec. l5 — (A P) — ualkan peace feelers 8Y8 8 dime a dozen and the M1195 Jffllli buying B113’- When Bulgaria, HUfiSii-TY and Rumania want to get out o! the war badly enough, they will have to ccme forward with a differrnt kind of article, labeled uliionai surrender." ‘Those are the main facts in the complicated set of military and diplomatic factors known as the Balkans situation. They reflect what murt be regarded as central truth of this situation- Bombccl by Allied planes and bcmbardcd by propaganda, shak- en by threat of political upheav- al at hrme and convinced that Germany is doomed. Hitler's Bal- kan satellites desperately wont ough to take the only avenue the Allies have opened to them, full surrender. Out of this predicament springs the peace feeier campaign ,\vhici1 thediulgarians have been ~ especially enthusiastic particip- lonts- In Ankara. capital of neut- ral ‘turkey, they have planted hopes and wishful thoughts under the irnpreuion they might be able to harvest an armistice short of abject defeat. Not Official These feelers have neither offried English ‘manna clal nor semi official status. They are strewn about by business men. diplomats an the loose or others with no zrihority to commit their‘ fncvernments. Such persons some- times speak only for themselves. sometimes with secret official- sanction. Thus thn satellite governments avoid butting themselves in line for a. Lurn down. vet make known their most desirable terms- Here Wils the apparent Allied onwser to the feelers: Sofln was bombed last Friday. state Secretary Cordell Hull iss-. ued s statement Saturday, warn- ing Bulgaria, Hungary and Rum- -u|an ulcis Arron-mo I In nods rlnia to get out of the war or suf- fer the came consequences as Germany. The Radio Tuesday Allied bombers hit Pir- aeus. n potential invasion port in "UIICOII" , the I i" Hitler's latroylng the German armies" St. John At the meefing Mr, Allan T. Lewis, K C . and Sena- tor Normrn M. Paterson. Lieuten- ant and Deputy of the Order: LEI“, R'§"""'". the‘ fi-ywnian V A D Officer. and W J Ben. nett. Director of Ambulance, also attended. The connmlwee “Inns in sturiv -cnri R"\‘Is1 Qt Iiolvrv on all mat. to" u'"""l"in". to Home Nm-t-ing "nrl w'll wire sncciwl attention to ‘he “P"rls of refresher courses for "enrhers, Nazi Propaganda Experts Frantic pence - but no‘. desperately m-j NDON, Dec. 14 —~AP)- 1110 all-out allied war of nerves, syn- chronized with the thunder of bombs on German cities. Ls driving propaganda weirdest outbursts of . . All the Germans know for certain is the Churchill-Rousevelt-Stalin plBd86 at Teheran-thu: the allies will strike soon from the south. wit. and wwt. and that "n0 Dowel‘ on earth can prevent us from de- ln one breath. allied grand Berbn days the assault will sprin from Britain gems; the fog-shroud- tnis winter, timed with a. great new Soviet winter offensive. controlled Scandinavian ‘Telegmph Bureau reports. "the l-lzgh 0on1- Germanys defences in the west are now considered much more important than the ueferlco of. a . The Bureau adds Field Marshal Gcn, Erwin Rommel has been named anti-invasion chief. In the newt breath, alsrmed by the bombing of Hoffa and mystified over Turkey's intentiinns, Berlin declares the msln bow will fail lgsinst the Belksnl. with British and American smiles - semis the Mediterranean to loin the Russians driving wwud Rum- onits and 01d Poland from th can. Iii-longing Alarms modern practice. the Nursing Ad-‘ tion and Brigade has met in Ottawa! Miss Blanche Anderson, ‘ Thus. the Nszi- l mand spokesman confirmed thutf l I i Advisory Com- . officially aminst dis-cuniing it entirely, some here briieve the locket gun either has failed to live up to expectations or allied P191165 have destroyed the factories pra- ducing it. Meznuvhiic, forced to aivcrt all available planes to the IIIUlL‘ front to ccmbat thc Briils-h and Americ- an uir ofl:r.si\'c. the Guunrm High Command 11:1, been solemnly in- fanning: the troops on tilt fighting front that Germany is using a new SiI°nt airplane" telling than "the relnon you don't see anti hear so many planes now is be-"nusc we are using this invisible machine at night." WRITERS IN UNIFORM ALLOWED EXTRA TIME TORONTO. Service men who wriic are to have an extra year in which tn pro- duce in the intervals botween bat- tle action their Wtrlr-s icr =1 $1‘- |500 prize offered for the best book nrcduced by a member of the Un- ited Nations forces- The award, offered by Mac- millans in celebration of their centenary. was to be given on the bass of manuscripts or plans for books of fiction or non-fiction submitted up to the end of 1943 The firm now announces that "recvlfllzlno tho arduous nature of service in the armed forces during the post your and the distance from London and New York of the position of many units of the British and American forces, it has been decided to postpone the closhin" date . . . to December 31. 1944." Canadian service personnel be- tween the BIB; of l9 and 3h are eligible for the main prize, for ‘smaller awards, and for o prize ,of $500 if the nvain award is won hv a non-Canadian Dec. 14- (C?) - No Iu nch-botr meal is quite complete Without Heinz Mustard for the meat! 0n hamburgs and, hot dogs as well. its racy to tastes simply swell! mm; MQNHK‘ . ovum TARGELQRMQE. Films Made With War Alcohol an. no “no photograph m. snugly into plncs- and there lies the blueprint of another Gonnon target duo bro pasting by our fighting airmen. Pictures token by ooridl reconnaissance oro vital Iinlu In the chain which will lead to the ultimate destruction of the Axis war mcdilne. Another link is in camera film on which these pictures are recorded. In melting this special film alcohol Is used, lost GI it is used for many other essential war purposes-for plastics, explosives, anti-freon and navigational instruments. In the factory, on the field of battle itself, Alcohol is melting d direct contribution to Victory. Because it is so urgently needed in such fabulous quantities, our plants are operating at peck capacity. GOODIERIIAM 8. WOIITS, LIMITED Winnipeg, Dec i5 — When the Canadian National Dauphin arrived ln Mcnireni s few mornings ago it curried two train from CHRISTMAS r001) vuuss more passenger than i: started with. They were born in the bagg- age car. ‘Their mother boarded the train at Plumes. Mann in s. crsia. She was a handsome St. Bernard. The pupa created a great deal of m. > room I not exoitetnent in the 0N5. . where they waited for their owner to pick them u Iligfr other. who also traveiledw , simply lay on the bu! floor loo r Shop EARLY For Your Holiday Needs OUR STORE WILL CLOSE EACH NIGHT AT THE USUAL TIME FROM NOW UNTILCHRISTMAS EXCEPT SAT- URDAY WHEN WE .WILL REMAIN OPEN UNTIL 9.30 FRvs' cocoa 1 Lb. Tin ----33c I/g Lb. Tin — — -— 20c ODLX SOAP DR. JACKSONS ROMAN MEAL 2 Lb. Pkg. — —- l ICING SUGAR 1 Lb. Pkg. -- — - (1 Coupon) Eatons BAKING H. P. SAUCE Club House Queen Heinz Tomato BULK COCOA Swansdown Aylmer Sweet PASTRY FLOUR DAVIS GELATINE i 12o Montserrat POWDER, 1 Lb. Tin———-—-—' OLIVES, 16 Oz. Bottle—--———-— RELISH, 27 O1. Bottle ——- -— — — 25o . 35o 81/2 Oz. Bottle——-— --—-——— 21c 19o 35o 25o 35o 20o KETCriUP. 14 Oz. Bottle -—-—-—-—- 1Lb.Bag---— — — —- —— --' CAKE FLOUR, Pkg. --—————-—' 7Lb.Bag--—————--——' ‘Z0 Eaton: Sungiow k COFFEE 2 Coupon; m--<- 49c i I Z i i i i 1 55c 27o 21o 19o A LARGE VARIETY OF. FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES Immediately the German H °"°°°' command is reported nuintn; it‘: fences on Koo, Lorna, Samoa and omel- Aceosn Iclsndsgoff the Turk- cou sud muslin roope the ‘nukish- ulgsrian frontier. In between these far-ranging alarms. Berlin walls gflllfllt the de- LIME JUICE. 16 Oz. Bot- |-: t Artifclsl vAriIIILA, a'o=. Cruot 14c 2For—-—-—-——--—-' Campbell: TOMATO SOUP Tin 11c. 2 For—--—' Islsnd Chicken SANDWICH SPREAD 7 O2. TIn-—-—--j—""' i-Jlunrnnleed PY"""PI 79mm‘- 6,-No long delay’?- 7.—lt is estimated there ore only three 4119"" ns many furs this year. 8.4% figure there n m: limes "w dr-"mm" for them. fit-Therefore the price must o0 llP- . .—I’rivate salon mode daily- BE SMART. SHIP YOUR FURS T0 uuunu: run root Moncton, N-B- F R McLAINE, Local Representative Charlottetown. P-E-I- - Qflfififffflyfilgiifli‘) Remember IDII These and "many other recent developments lfiitddefflinitaelywintfi sl patiemoAeeor em- inate the satellites in order to vmqting allied “terror attacks", iaottle up, blocked; “ysnd one‘? l blgngly {finial}, thglmds ermimy unmorc u u a - s s r llminarv to invasion from the‘? 000ml! In 1M0 s or thl wsat- Also it is expected that the mu bombinl of f‘ ' German pmole will remember "We Nssis can only ‘hat IIIQII‘ mm in 1m begun m] $5110‘ Ncfnmgllgnnuum oy I n ' 3"’ mmm" IWQ leave thst w the degensl rm nmnsn vlcroiTrs (EAUEIIJ SAVINGS DROP IONDON-(Ctlgt- Britifird mil; r, successes svc resu "dIXI.\li'I\ii1B"'iIIOP In mull’ ssv 111x50 néiflblflmflhm ti”) 00mm‘ Gum's‘: In the lost our mon . {om h ‘uh mum’ =o0.ooo do tsoonaoono n1 n ' 500,060. “hi. Lord Kindmley. I u rhairmnn of the Nmtlcnsl saving I‘ 0o t.» ', ~ ~ “I Cqiillmflteueét t our ssvinn results I J ~ . . - =' II. ~ I em. m “n. n“ . . . _ . ~ . w.) n-Iep with the. tmnendbun l n. In m. efforts which the fiahtius MW Gemini, ha?“ w“; o? m, nr» makinn. and the still ilflllig jammy“. new not" ‘upon’ lnd fforr which they will awn Qsueu’ upon to make." he mo. while Britons nus been w: CRANBERRIES. Lb. _ _ 20¢ nusnnooms 1/, u». Box -.- as.» CELERY. Head - - — — 19¢ new LETTUCE. Head _ 2o» CHOICE GRAPES, Lb.. -- - 21o ill l 00 w gtopuus rom Qfifliifi §IIIIIIIJIJIIJJI b l