PAGE FOUR THE llllllllllTTiluun Glllllllllll llnrllllll Dill! (Pounded In Ill?) President: Melt. Col. W. Chute: S. Mal-In Vloe-Proaldent: J. l. Burnett. l‘. J. I. < Secretary: Ueut. Col D. A. Mulflnnon. 0.8.0. [dim and Director: J. ll. Burnett. IPJJ. hackle Edltnn: Frank Walker and Haul. In A. Burnett. ILCJMLB. 10a Act-Ive lemon) “The Strongen Memory in Weaker Than the Weakest Ink." mmn. niicaiimiin. :2. me McNaughton’: Chances According to the usually reliable Letter-Review General AIcNaugIiton has a poor chance at the moment in North (irey. “If the Liberal mach- ine goes to work, regardless 0f effort and cost." it says, “his election would not be impossible, although, up t0 the present our informants. in- cluding many Liberals, tell tis that it is improb- able. An (lttawti suspicion is that the Ciovern- ment will not go actively" to his rescue. He seems to have served his purpose, but not too well. and, if he is defeated in North Grey, he will be per- mitted to resign." This opens up some interesting possibilities, lot least of which is the prospect of Colonel Ralston being offered his old job back agziiu, as the only Liberal Defense Minister in ivlioiu the people have any confidence. But would lie take it? Surely not after his openly expressed distrust of his leader's veracity and integrity. Meantime, trial balloons have been issutnl at Ottaiva. to the effect that the present Parlia nzcnt will be dissolved as soon as it meets on January 3t, and that there will be an election by the end of the winter. This wotild leave the (iovernnicnf with no money votcd by Parlia- ment after March 3i. The scale of present ex- penditures would make it inost tindesirablc ‘to have the country financed by Governor-Gene-"aks warrants for several months. “It is quite und- erstandable." s" s the LrHrr-Rcc'iert', “that Mr. King would prefer an election, during which he could drag a lot 0f very aged red herrings across his trail, to another active session of the. present House; but we doubt the political wisdwn of any such trick. Public opinion is becoming quite roused over ziational affairs, and should his opponents campaign intelligently, the leav- ing of the country without a Parliament for two or three months, at a very critical stage in our affairs, would be a great blow t0 Mr. King and his followers, if he actually proposes to head his party again in a political campaign." Why Gasoline Ralions One need not go beyond the figures given by Secretary Ickes at Washington to under- stand why gasoline rationing for civilians must continue. Airplanes consume literally oceans of gas- oline. To take 1000 four-motor bombers on a six-hour mission requires 1,800,000 gallons. I-z addition there are millions of ground vehicles such as tanks, trucks, self-propelled artillery, jeeps, bulldozers and tractors. There are gasol- ine engines which furiiish power for field hos- pitals, radio and telephone stations, pipe lines, refrigeration equipment, and which drive patrol Ind crash boats. Gasoline stoves are used for cooking, heating water, ivarming tents and litits. It is estimated that 50 gallons of various oil products are required monthly for each man in uniform. For Canada's enlistment of around one million, that means 50,000,000 gallons a month- A motorized division on the move eats up one gallon of gasoline for every 21 feet, or more than 25o gallons to a mile. Such facts and figures make clear why .ve at home must continue on short gasoline rations. Desolation In Norway The following brief report received by the Royal Norwegian Information Service in \Vasl.:- ihgton, gives a partial picture of conditions which obtain as the vindictive Nazis are slowly forced to relinquish their hold on occupied ter- ritories: All northernmost Norway, as far south as Lyngsfjorden, has been virtually evacuated by German troops who are now believed massing iiear the so-called Lyngen Line, where many observers believe a stand will be made. This does not necessarily mean that no Germans re- main in the far north, whcrc reargtiard units of SS-troops are presumably still scattered about. It does mean the Germans have forcibly evacu- ated all Norwegian civilians from that wide and generally desolate region, and it also means that the Germans have burnctl down 0r blown up zill homes, shops, sheds, factories or other build- ings in that area. In northernmost Norway the (Eermans have applied the scorched earth policy with a vengeance; frankly their aim has been to make it unfit for human habitation. Residents of small coastal communities have been torn from their homes with little or no notice and forced aboard evacuation vessels, or coin- pclled to set out on foot on the long and ardu- ous overland journey to Tromso and Narvilc. In most cases they were given no chalice to take along supplies or cvcn to dress properly for the journey. About 250,000 persons, representing the total population of the provinces of Finnmark and Troms, have been affected by the forced evacu- ation. The main tide has reached Tromso, unw hopelessly overcrowded, and is moving on fr. Narvik, where the congestion is equally bad. In addition to the Norwegian civilians, there are German troops from northern Norway and Fin- ‘nnd, and swarms of Russian prisoners-of-ivaf who had long been employed m1 (iflflflflfl i0"- "tructinn projects in the north. _ Several hundreds of evacuees have succeerl- ad in eluding the Germans and crossing ti": border into Sivcdcn. Some of those first evacu- ited have been reaching Trondheim and even Oslo. Among those arriving at Oslo were 5o men and women, aged from 60-to 9o years, who had been resident of the Old Folks Home at Honningsvaag; they had made the first stage of the journey by boat, and the rest by r.~iil—- 44 hours of sitting oti straight-backed benches. It may be that some Norwegians are evad- ing the evacuation by going into hiding, but tlie announced penalty for attempting to do so is immediate death by shooting. EDI IURIAI.‘ NUI t! The shortest day. v u u a The war news on the western front is dis- turbing, but only by comparison with recent tremendous gains which the Allies have made. It is just four years ago since Prime Minister Churchill reviewed the offensive in Western Egypt, warning that a threat of invasion of Britain persisted. 1 o George Eliot (Mary Aim Evans), Englisn novelist and poetcss, died this date 1880, lier place is among the greatest writers of ling! fiction; just as Jane Austen excelled as a dc- liiieator of upper class life, she excelled as a painter of middle class life and character, her work being marked by mtich pathos and hurti- are considered her finest works: “Animals such agreeable friends-they ask no questi they pass no criticisms." Ill December 22 ‘narks the winter solstice. The sun will continue to set later until the last week of June. As for winter mornings in this latitude, however, they will continue to become darker until the middle of January. The weath- er bureau, in its calculation of the length of the average day, figures the time between sunrise and stmsct in mid-December as about 5) l10ttr>, 15 nzinutes. There is a crumb of comfort in the knowledge that the period when the day will be- gin t0 be longer at both ends is htit a few weeks Z‘\\'3\'. 11H! F115, Ill M‘ ll‘ if ll‘ The unusually bad summer weather has raised agricultural problems in Great Britain beginning with spring ‘frosts that wiped out (lllfllllilleS of food, continuing through a stin- lcss middle summer which harmed the milk otit- put and the sugar beet crop. On the bright side, however, a new variety 0f wheat has been developed by British agriculturalists that out- yields the old varieties by 50 per cent, particu- larly in a wet year. Even this summer the new wheat yielded l4 sacks to the acre compared with a national average over the tert pre-ivar years of about 7 sacks. U!!! A Norwegian underground newspaper called “Krigens Gang" (The Course of the War) has the following to say about punishment of war criminals: "The settlement with the Nazis will demonstrate to the world on what cultural level the Norwegian people stand. There is no doubt that the Nazis must be punished for their trea- son, and all war criminals must be brought to book regardless of nationality, but this must be done through legal procedure in Norwegian courts and according to Norwegian law. It has always been the practice in Norway to allow the accused to defend himself-this right was not denied the worst criminal. The Nazis shall have this right, even though they denied it to us during the occupation. For our own sake we must not descend to the same level as they and take revenge into otir own hands. Punish» merit must be left to the authorities so that there will be no doubt but that every individuals case will be carefully tried." _ a s w Among Scotland's post-ivai‘ industries which may be greatly expanded is that of bagpipe mak- ing. Mr. Donald Shaw MacKinnon, secretary of the Association of Highland Societies of Edinburgh. is confident that it will be quite a stibstantial line of business for years to come. This war has given bagpipe music a tremendous filip. Time and again war correspondents have recorded deeds of derring-do performed by troops whose courage has been stimulated by the skirl of the pipes. The players were often young men trained as pipers since 1939. On de- mobilization many will be keen to possess a “stan’ o‘ pipes" of their own. A corporal in an Army pipe band is booked for West Africa when the ivar ends to tutor a contingent of nat- ives keen to become proficient players. A desert army of Bedouins are proud of their pipe band "equipped not with native reed instruments but with the true Scots brand of bagpipes specially imported from their land 0f origin"——]ordnn Highlanders evidently. The pibrocli. while “sounding o'er mountain and glen" as of yore, is also shrilling its stirring, animating notes in distant lands which have taken enthusiastically to "the wail and birl" of pipe music. n n m a Ill “Tell my wife I’m okay," radioed R.A.F. \Ving Commander Robert R. P. Davidson 0f Vancouver, from his flaming typhoon one clay last May. Then he crash-landed in a field in northern France and disappeared into the stand- ing wheat to spend a period, disguised as a French peasant, studying the launching methods of robot bombs. He learned about them-but even more about the nature of the German. Then news came of the invasioiiillof France and by this time Davidson had seen all he want- ed of the Germans and their ways. “I was in a town awaiting the Allied advance," he says. “The Germans had given orders to shoot any- one who appeared in the streets. Watching from upstairs, I saw a little girl run into the street from a doorway. Her mother ran to bring hcr back and fell, wounded by a German rifle shot. The llun ran out of another doorway to where she lay. Shuffliiig t0 her knees, she pleaded for mercy. Ile finished her off with his bayonet and killed the child. I saw it my- self." Davidson has been in the R. A. F. for seven years. He has flown against the jap- anese in Ceylon. and against the Germans and Italians in Greece, Crete, North Africa, France. Flanders and Germany. Now he is on leave home. our; Jdam Bede and The Mill On '1'/ic Flore’ THE CHARLUITETOWN. GUARDIAN Notes By The Way A horn’: tall ll worth 818.50. according to e. Montreal judge who awarded this amount to a horse dealer who claimed the tall: of 16 of his horses were docked when being shipped btyh . Maybe this ls ll r1 ht for e dealer. but how about t e horses-especially mtly- tlmel-(Ottiiwa Journal). Old-tlmen nu wag their white beards as they w I1. Toronto 1s sat- isfied that. we witnessed yesterday the greatest snowstorm o! ell time to hit this district. kind of storm until then we had only read of. I-t was the urban Cfllllllefllkrt of the story of the great mow in lame Donne.- (Torontc Telegram). Farm land in the vicinity of Hamilton 1s said to be Just about the liishest-priced 1n Canada. mu. 1s a condition of wartime, ut it is not. based on sound econo y, and a day of reckoning may come when farm values are suddenly deflated and some people will wonder how they ever of so far outt pn n limb-(Ham ton Spec- or . i When Douglas "Wrong Way" ‘Corrlganb lti-year-old son twice drank poison out of bottles lie found 1n the home. it was remark- ed that he seemed to take after ‘ls father, It. should rather be said that dad 1s living up to his reputation for doing things the wwnz way. by leaving poison about where a baby could reach 1t.- (Windsor Star). Navigation on the lakes for the 1944 season 1s about over. but 1t 1s not; passing without its last touch l f drama. ..'1xteen large carriers, |Wll2l1-3.755.0U0 bushels of graln and a quantity of flour 1n their holds. Ihave cleared the lakehead. and are on their last dash for lower lake ports. This ls a scene that never falls to make pulses beat faster all along this waterway. It. 1s ii race against time, and happily the big frelgliters nearly always w1n.— (Windsor Star). "Loglstlcfl is a good term. no doubt. The Greeks had a ivord for it. In fact. “log1st1cs" comes from the Greek. But why should oiie use an unfamiliar and obscure term when a. common one would do? If military experts. commentators and writers want to use “logistlcsfl wc-ll and good. But. for the average citi- zen who flnds 1t. inconvenient to carry a large dictionary about wlah. him, why not say what 1s meant, namely, "having to do with trans- port and supply"?--Brantford Ex- posltor). l-‘lgures ol’ hug production 1n Canada for the first nine months of 1944 show that Alberta 1s 5:111 far 1n the lead. Up to the end o! September. Alberta had contrlbtit- ed 2,261,000 to the flow of hogs Into COXHTIIETuiaI channels, eventu- ally to feed allied armies overseas. ggtarlo stood second with 1,533,- . Saskatchewan third wltli 1.- 484.000 and Manitoba fourth with 636,000. Alberta's mnrketlngs 1n- creased 640.000 this year over last, or about forty per cent. but there are signs that production 1s now falling ofY.—(Lethbr1dge Herald). An experiment 1n pro-fabricated schools 1s being made at Welling, Kent, where work will begin Shortly 0n a bungalow type school to accoinmoiate more than 200 children. The school 1s to be a permanent structure and 1s being erected 1n Kent to deal wlth over- crowding problems. says The Fart Wllllam Times-Journal. Once the drainage and foundation are 1n- stalled. it will be a matter of days to piece together thoconcrete sec- tions of such a school. The design 1s the result of an invitation to leading architects to submit plans. House construction will take prior- ity over all other types of building, so a special committee was set up to explore the possibilities of such pie-fabricated school houses. (Windsor Star). Use of The Hague 1n Holland an upon England brings the irony of a site for launching V-2 rockets W°Yl<1 W" n l0 Peak. we should think. That's the town where the World Court used to alt 1n Andrew Carnegfefis Peace Palace. There met the great. conference called by Czar Nicholas II to establish unf- versnl peace 1n 1899. Just as the twentieth century was about to dawn-a century o! pence nearly everybody said except that old curmudgeon, William T. '. suld 1L would be the bloodiest of all the centuries. One sturdy rem- nant of those world peace visions of 1899 Ls stlll with us. Every year we are edlfled to read the annual report of the Carnegie Foundation for Peace. presided over by D1‘. Dally News). One of the unforeseen r m of the aerfal attacks on the rltlsh Isles Ls that. searchlfghts are the lnolrect. cause of the death of a huge number of birds. particularly ilflrllnss- Wnen the powerful beams Ire thrown into the sky 1n certain areas the starlings fly around and around 1n vast. numbers. one light 1n the County of Suffolk attract- ing as many us 100,000 birds, and lief-‘D on flying until they fall dead from exhaustion. In sum nuin. bers do they fall that special crews have to be sent. out afterwards to sweep up the corpses from the road because of the squashed bodies which would make the surface slippery for nrmy vehicles. One humane offlcer asked permission on one occasion to switch of! the light for an hour to enable the starlings to rest. They alfghted on trees_ tn such numbe that. the branches broke under their weight. —(St. Thomas Times-Journal). Ilugh refrigerator barges Ire be- lnx bull-t 1n Australia for food shortage 1n the tropical war. They are called "Reeferfl. Each barge holds a day's food rations for two dlvlslons. The "reefers" can be shifted from base to base astroopa move forward. and can store food for indefinite rlods. Their sup- plies are rep enfshed by mother ships. Each barge displaces about 300 tons. with a net. cubic capacity of 16,000 feet. and gross capacity of 23,000. Four miles of pfpfn on each barge re ulate tempera urea. A crew of any four 1a needed. Australian. American and Chinese workmen astemble the barges from prefabricated parts sent from Am- erlca. One centre em loya 1.100 Chinese. They are e clent. and chrlsten each barge. when com- pleted. wlth n Chinese character.- (Auatrulinn News-Letter). If we; the 1 Nicholas Murray Butler.-—(Ch1ciigo a UUIAL MAIL COUBIEBB Bin-Please allow me spice In your column; for a word about our rural mail couriers. who labor aloiit! with top-heavy loads of (Xirlstniiig mall and parcels which. as I rel n y u Guardian. have been the heaviest 1n years. Our couriers so throuBhWF Wlll‘ ter on bad roads. half mil bu: reliable citizens. and less Illlfll of their box-holders ever 8W6 mun e thought. “Why 1a the mflll late?" some may u- 111m l5 work on cars to be done. Mid mechanics to be paid. and the)’ ask big prices; also WRSOHB 30d slelghs. By the time the rural courler 1s fitted 11D l0!‘ dYlVlXlE m” mall, his cheque 1s all 80119- 'I'1'ien he 1s sUPPOEBd w Qbllie the nglghbours. when asked to take a parcel for Mrs. Smith t,_o Mrs. Jones. the mall mun doesnl; mind! Christmas comes and goesi lie at; up early and works late, 11c s only the mall man. But, 1! 1B doesn't make his trip he 1s another kind of s. man! After reading about the larlll mall this Christmas season I be- gan to think for a while of the wot-k dong by these loyal men flll over Canada. Let. us not forfll them, though 1t be only will‘! 5 greetlnff gall‘? w I “m” r’ e K BOX HOLDER. He Spoke For The Dead (Montreal Gazette) Twenty-nine years BRO—-ll1'D9C' ember 1915- John McC-raes In Flanders Fields was published in London. These lines did not be to that iournallsm pf verse u war tends to foster. They brolkl! ll B ‘or-use to flll the excitement and stress of war. For the most. terrible randinz thins: 1n wur is the silence of the dend. And hers at. last ivas a voice through wnlsh the dead ar-oke. _ Pm»??? “l” l9?‘ i‘if.°“.l}{§.."'?v‘li§ W10 l1 VC N i. - had died knew that this was the om! Pitch could. For the dead lines remind the ltvlnil of fact d I1"?! 1n m ' t 5 , c! 1 .. , Ilbqtikliinelsii war 1s not like death 1n the stark n ilir- well the wéoi: Uir. tiie st 13-. vo . li s"\'\31“1tns n mini ,1 "v.13, the full vlcnr of his 111p. Sn it..is ll...‘ tlciase ilcad m MtCreiVs merit lfil. T’ T0113‘. wmlnri th- livlnz that the llVf‘! "they stave up were, lust .r:iI 5'», '1‘ _».-. ‘ll, feel We are the dead We llvacl felt 1'5 1V1‘? w? as full 3rd i=1 tbcre the .1.i.1'l “l : cliort. days n20 p dawn. saw sunset- . l Loved 231% were loved. and now we 1 In Flariaders Fields. It. 1s just because, these dead know that they have Riv-an up so much 1n dylniz that they make so searching a demand of the llvlnz. The words they speak tire some- thing more terrible than a plea or a challenge. There is almost ti curs: 1n the intense last lines: 1f ve break faith with us who die. We shall not sleep. tnoukh 001719433 RTOW In Flanders l-‘iclds. . But 1.111s poem 1a made real by somethiuiz mo.'e than the depth‘ of its feeling und by somrzilnni: greater than the skill cf its literary presentation. We cannon foritet that the man who wrote 1'. mined those for wiinm he had spoken. These War-Time Pipes (Hanzilton Spectator! conscious these days and some-trims: of experts us 101131115 what 1s flt or not tit for that mellow affinity with tobacco which roves the utmost in solace and watts a man to the Elv- slan realm of Nlcotunfa. Almost every tree and shrub his be;n cirmvn upon since aenulne brim‘ root from the lvlediterraneau countries was cut of! bv Zllf! ivar. ‘Hie results are little short 0t ills-I mal for the man woo demands] coolness. sweetness and that elusive flavour which con: riucs to unprove- upon itself with considerate useq Instead the nveraize millet-r nus to‘ put tip Wlbll everytrflnu from, peach wood to suizar pine. uni of "the pitch imd for ivhich often with some French cherry ‘trees make excel- lent pipes, nnd only - n a ers have been experlenclniz a hot rouiili time it and are lonizfnil for the day when brhirs will aizaln be 1n supply and at. a nrtce ivltfcli docs not wreck a weekfis my. The best substitute for sienufne brlar has been found 1n the mots mountain rhododendron lamp]. The former crows 1n wild profusion 1n certain parts of North Carolina where mountain farmers are urubblnu large quantities of burls nnd selling them to nine fuc- torlea at $30 1\ ton. The burl 1s des- cribed as being really only n bo anlcal wart. and may also be found 1n the doirwood and other shrubs. ese burls nra axe-cleaned at the factories. sawed into slabs and then into ~ Machines miore he rough-shtipe bowls. Sandlniz. siainhiz and pol- fshlnz follow. The finished r0- duet is not too bad. The sbor e of ciiuirett has brought. a tre- mendous demand for nines. Your n: ' umluatinii nine Hiliullef. now- ever. will not. soon admit. that. anv- bliuig_can_suppliint_rea_l_b r. “Give oouuiiiv siiii-zr iioiiuiri oiiit III-a e nllelh unle . , long; rrl.‘ e musket, Pill‘ lifllolllfeitlu- hrliolbylnlfi 1n ' l l v I To The Customers of THE FASHION SHOPPE Owing to an unprecedented rush Wednel- day when our shipment of sillrstocklngs went on sale there were probably some of our customers disappointed at not securing a pair, but this was entirely unavoidable and in no way due to any oversight by the firm, and we hope that those unable lo secure them will overlook ll. We tried to do 1t the way we thought would be fairest to all by telling the customers when they would be available. In future we cannot take any phone calls for stockings and please do not ask us to hold them as it is impossible. All future shipments will be put on the counter for immediate sale. THE FASHION SHUPPE l l E. R. Brow & Son Fire, Auto, Life, Accident, Sickness l and Plate Class Insurance at Lowest Rate at Summerside, D. O. Stewart Agent 144 Richmond St. Charlottetown . But war-the swiftlmlw b91111 0 B“ D man hatand hethls ‘ifiiiiisgni tu this a 11105 911V O 91' l! D un w“ ‘h’ ‘ind “mum spfifkyalclcfxls’ world crisis ls over. a blbe he can smoke." says to bear a1- as for some of the trrivesties ff d. he wouldn't izlve his last char nant peace It comes not. to the sick but,‘ "wvllll: "l" - ' to . aren't cliipr l nines: they are lust nom- . t sclenublc libel‘. 1nd mlsh: ‘F11’ bet- m" to m“ om but’ o ~r be usri- foil the making cf fruit baskets or stenlncltlers. lOur nelizhbors lemliase hills Pine amokcrs are bccomlii: wood - AS IF THE WIND And winter soniis. the snow and n . Left. n11 these things. and the old house Across the wnv stands emptv and one. I can picture 1n mv mind how the sweeplnil Wind rattles the closed doors like, n Just stonuiniz by. But no one an- swers Now. a... paths are filled with Like those the wootlchueks wore Last summer 1n the lilll meadows Llirhts that us gleam from windows Through the loniz dark hours have none As 1f the wind which took the s ness From tlzc fields hurl blown them ou . —hanslnz Chilstman 1n the Christ- __1iin Science lifonftor.“ ___ ...e Shell for Poultry i Stronger egg shells ‘ls what poultrymen want. lllllllllllllVEll Bllllllll Gll-QIIIHA SHELL makes these harder shells possible. High in calcium —li1glily soluble. Distributed By llclilllfilltll & BOYLE Hunter River H. ‘J. lllBllll OPTOMETRIBT Fitting and Bilalllfllll Glance Monluue. l’. B. I. Oflleo Hours: l0 to 1.! A. M. l lo 5 P. M. ill-lilll elm. by appointment Offleo Connected wllli DBUGSTORE. Dodd’: Kidney Pllls supplies across fiance. LV. OIIARLOTTETOWN To NEW “M; Ono Way (Plus ‘hi! MARITIME TEllTllAl Swiss Seek U. S. Raw Materials BERN. Dec. lB-(Allll-A inoup of 50 American businessmen today concluded a vlslt to Switzerland during which they nri-anized to purchase Swiss products. ll: was eported Swiss officials urged the I out» iulte lwcLebd 9 Bentley . I. neivniiz. i; a J. A. BENTLEY. [ Q Berrlltnn and Altai-mu.“ lI-uw ll. ll. "lilll! 6v my Chartered “Mumm- ~ l8 Grafton l Charlottetown Plume 2080 M, m 3'04"» W Mlnnlnr. 0.11. _____._._____ Inlll rell and lilllpllpan ll. F. Allcllbllll Chartered Accountant; Eastern Triul Building Charlottetown Richard B. Johnston Attorney At L“ Conunlufoner for Deeds. Etc in Prince Edward Inland. "0 _ _ sipiililipt...» is mm nitmTtllPi-il 420 31 53mg ii. Mass ‘___i____ | eizs rxiiiiiiin, AN L18 E5 FITTED J. s. .‘.YLOR'l OPTOMETRIST i Corner Kent and Queen lie Phone Residence 1018 lvenlngs by Appointment! Phone 1956 l‘ Ame ans to supply raw materials and to nttem t to Oblflin Alllfll military perm sston to truck the Mlnard’; Relieves Sprain. CONSULT Charles R. McQuaid B A. . Solicitor. Notary. Etc Blley Building. Charlottetown Phone 333 ll. J. A. BROWN. D.P Orthopedic For Foot Ailments GEETETQDIST 143 Great George Street CHARLOTTETOWN P.E.l. E, F, llutcheson 8i Sllll OPTOMETRISTS "Specialists in the fil- ling of glasses for the correction of ocular ile- facts.” 53 Grafton Street SMELTS Highest Market Prices Quick Returns Expressage Paid WATTERWORTH COLD STORAGE Montague 12-18-17 l/IUNC TON SAI"’T JOHN... 7,00 A. M. 11,51) A. M. 5_ 15 P. M. (‘Manchu OBI!) GI \SGOW P. M. L00 RISIBVATIUYBBiINIOI-MATION- PllONl ICU-I'll lTfl-llfiflll A. Largo BARRISTEIK, ETC. 144 Richmond Street Chlrloltetown. P. ll l. ___- ~~ BELL £9 MATHIESN Mons! Tb LOAN Cameron Block Chlrltllm"! | H.F. McPhee B.A. K-C- NOTARY ma. BARRISTER SOLICITOB lulgy__fl||flfllnj - __Chulottewn a PALMER f! HASLAM A. J. HASLAM. an. inn BARRISTER. c-rc. Blnk of Nova Scotla Chllllfl" °l.‘6'i‘~i'é§"7r"6 folk" i rinm u r. o. no: ll MTALBAN FARMER B.A-. LLB. I Canadian Bunk of Commerce Bill’: MONEY T" LOAN ‘AIBESTER SOLTCTTOR 51¢ .- -- .---- -» --.= ALEX W. MATHIESON Office: 90 Great Georalslml Money to Loan iectloll BABRIBTIR. sonicrroii. 11°- Thay Malt liloal ilhristmas GIFTS leleot n nu or Cvwsll" . . The Glft. of beauty- FOR HER SELECTED owns 0F TOILETRIES - Perfumes -' Dustin; Powder Toilet Water lllh Bulk Cologne: Bu»! Llpllloll Max Peeler Face Powder Mo: Peeler Pancake llshu n Wrltlu: Pam PIACTICAI. G111‘! Ion MIN Molliuril sinwiu h" §'.."l'..".‘t."'a.2‘¢t.'l"‘=5i“ shggmmuuma nlnuilln s~.':'ii'ii..."'i'i°'i-° m m; eolvl ozrhllillfllflllrobrliiln. P qghfl. cfgerel" I AlIIWAYSHuM TIIE 2 mics innnnnlieieilfl" l