_ Wolsey Mr-r noun F m: GHARLDTTETUMI iiuiniiiiii Morning Dally (Founded In lull) President: Lieut. (Jul. W. Chester S. Mel-lilo Vice President: .I. ll. Burnett». l-l-l- Secretary: Lleul. (Jul. _D. A. Maclklnuon. 9-5-0. Editor and Rlan;[lllg Director. .I. l. Burnett. FJ-l Associate Editors; Frank Walker 1nd Illl l. “"9" SUBSCRIPTION RATEs By Mall in P.l-J.l., $1M) per w": 52-50 l" 5 "W"!!! shzs for 3 months; 50o for one llwlllh ' I l ' ".00 per your $3.00 fur ll lnpllllll Lnysiiisntiilr,sbiuuntnsi. 001i like: 33:21:" n" M ‘I t! Pr vim-es and .' - §§.,.,§L,"{t‘.'.iii§. 5:00 per your; $1.00 for l montlll. ‘ 50c for 3 Instill-Ill w‘ ‘l: it tfii- (I ‘flllflll may by ohlllned ll Tllifaflnxlllguhitiid‘lihlvlrl- "m" squr“ Ne‘ hm“ Old south News Agency, Corner Milk 1nd Wlllllllllfio Buslorr hlelrupuliinu News AFMY. u“ PWI 3F hlontreii .|. Flnc ass Bay st. ‘fvflmm N"! 5""- Chulcau ‘Lilllllfl’, Ottawa; Wolfe's Ne!" Blind Elli- bury UuL; lluh Tobu '0 shop. Mvlwloll N "The $tidnqest Memory is Weaker than Weakest Ink." ’—~I~A‘RTTL-l\'. niacsiuiacnniifisiz i lhirt) Politics Again 'l h; .~.lit’tlll\ t i tltc LILIIC Party lll Manitoba m.“ 1y, ,-;\- iH/uuigtui hv lllf‘ ziction of its leader. llrin. S. l. l‘.ll'lllt’l'_ viiiir has resigned as Minis- t.-r or‘ lJllI-Illl’ lll lllt’ lil'£l\'l\L‘ll Li0\'€l’lllllt‘.llf_ His ri~-i;;ii.i:i~ii tWllllVs \\Illl it the willidratvul 9f bit- tint’. iiu-iiibt-rs from irarticipatioit in tin» rriziiititiii zttliitiiiisiiiiiioii formed by b1!‘- lil'll£l\\'ll it: 2t ttztt‘ tituaisttrc two years ago. The [Qllnll] givt-ii for lllls‘ uctioit is not any difference oi iiivitilrill on vital i-sttcs, but simply Pfellllfil’ lirzicltctté ".iiip;irt-tii willingness” to accept lead- crsltip of tlic National Conservative. Party, “malt-iii; it impossible for us to continue the >\1‘il\.(\l'[ vit- liiivc given you in the past, whether or not vt-tt ztccriu :l".l\‘ll leadership." .\lr. illrrichcii lttts already tnadc it clear that he wtutld uctcitt the Conservative leadership otilv uTl condition that its policies had his in- (l0l‘.5£ll.l(|ll. lle is known to be progressive in his vicws, and to he wholeheartedly in favor of itiolriliztiig all thc resources of the nation be- hind our witr effort. Mobilization for total war is the vcry first plank in the C. C, F. plat- form. \\'hv thcn shotild they not welcome this opportunity-of joining forces with the Conserva- tives under .\lr. llritclv-en? If they could pull with him in a provincial coalition cabinet, why not in the fctlcrztl field where their professed zeal for an all-out tvar effort would have greater scope? Alas, it would seem that for all their pro- testations it is personal and party ambition, not national ititercsis, that governs C.C.F. policies, -at least in Blanitoba. A Story For Old And Young Christopher Money's latest novel, “Thoro- fare" (nteaititig Main Street) has the signific- ant dedication "For Uncles and Aunts", but it will appeal to parents and children as well. It is not a short story by any means. The author admits he produced it leisurely, and the quota- tions with which he preface: it indicate the frame of mind in which it was written, viz.: From G. K. Chesterton: “The past is always present yet it is not what was, but whatever seems to have been." And again, from Prospero in Th: Tempest: "You do yet taste Some subtleties o’ the isle." 1t i: the tale of an English boy's pilgrimage from his childhood England and his acclimate.- tion as a well-developed American. It is brim- ful of literary allusions, quotations and atmos- phere, just ruch a hook as l. connoisseur would con, linger over, and enjoy to the full, the author having 1 thorough understanding of books and boys u well. A quotation will illustrate. The villa c referred to is the one in which Edward Fitz rald of “Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" Tune was born, Woodbridge, Suffolk, hi: home being named Bredficld House. It had two book otoru, on: dealing in classics and second-hand plumes, the other In modern fiction. “.....Thc Brcdfield (classic store) shelves Trad harboured editions more famous still. Ed- ynrd FitzGei-ald, one of Wllfordfi odditiel, once cold, ‘Brodficld in s rock of ages to rely on,’ and old john Bredfleld (Harry's father) rctorted that some of the books certainly had great ltcy- lng er. A few, a vcr few customers on the orofarc had seen FitzGernldfi Rubalynt "in print u roon as anyone in the world. Truly, said Uncle Dan, that wu an cxotlc Percinn rose to bloom In a dim provincial bookshop. But (the modern store) was the perfume of new magazines Ind the wonderful obituary sweetness of The Timer front age (arriving by the mail train about noon). olse was the honeyed redolence of Mudle and W. . Smith (the only book iobber who ever got to be Sec- retary of Both Navy and Army, and cartooncdl in music by Gilbert and Sullivan.) Wolsey’: was the circulating library and the bookseller (Marie Corclli and Rider Haggard) and Indy Collanmorcs dog cart waiting at the door with a groom while she explored the "The Tatler" to lcc if hcr shooting party had been pictured. “Geoffrey (the hero of the novel) indul ed nose and eyes along the forward counterl inc saleslatly as lovely as Miss Debbidgc) and Uncle Dztn disappeared among the shelves at the back. By the time he reappeared with a pack- age Geoffrey lmd found one of these little pink covcrcd ‘Hooks for the Bairns’ which cost l peiitiy. llc was absorbed in some livgly pic- ittrt-s of lircr llzilrbit and The Tar Baby when Uncle tool.- him in hand. " ‘I “tan! g1 biiiilvi’ Stlitl Geoffrey, " ‘I've got a book for you,’ said Uncle Dan. ‘You can have it after tea.’ Then he saw what (it-of was cxiittiining. ‘I'm damned,’ he said to hiiiiscli." Tllfll \\'.'is lll linglzind. In America, one day Aunt llrv ~H.<L'\'*l<‘i| to Squire Chesapeake that Fllf‘ w.-i~" :iiivi~n~ ti- ltiiow what to do Wlll1 Zirwf \\'llill' his l'iiclc l)'iii revisited England. This \v;i~- his I't'\]lllll.\'(‘f "Ylllll" pt-rplcxitics zilmitl jtrff is mighty slim irzzrsd to 'l"c:it~l<lc. .i\t lt-rist y0' young scala- ~ is good Ill his studies. I have lrccn figur- iilll, i-oiilri I stigqcsl In Dari to give Teacklc .¢~ tutoring? ll<*'ll got left at school if he i~n'i l|ii'l|1l h. |'IIH‘I'.\', l rt-ttrtll how my old lilllllll< '|‘<-:it‘l\li' lllllilTl ubotii hiring zt scholar f0 rive nit; it liitlc iltit-tt'iu.'iiriii' about that 1gb,’ Tullius 'I'cncklc said the bcst kind of American v |> is one that's been tutored by an Ellglliillllfltl and vicey-vcrsa. He even had a young Englishman picked out for mg but the feller bud to go back home and I missed all that good lcariiiii‘. Matter an’ fact it was a fcllcr iiztmed C-L-O-Ll-Li-ll- Randy and I culled it Clow but 'l‘tillius 'l'eachle. Put us right. He said :‘ Boys will not bluff When tutored by Clougli.’ he was raised with gentry down in Chafsioii. He was teachin‘ boys up in Mziss-chusetts but‘ Tullius Teackle figured he'd likely be relieved to come South. Of c0'se he's forgotten notv,i but they tell me he got to be considerable of a| poet. I always been too busy to read after hiivfl.” A delightful book to browse over. Published by George J. McLeod, Toronto, $3.00. An Apt Illustration The doctrinal social reformer, says the Globe and Mail, is a man who believes he has a solu- tion for the most vexing problems of society and is determined to apply it. What is so ob- jectionable about him is that he will not re- cognize that there may be other solutions, or a whole combination of methods, by which these problems can be solved by men 0f, good will without shattering the existing fabric or arrest- ing the continuing process of social life. Like the old Greek robber, Procrtistes, the doctriii-iire social reformer has a bcd of standard ulzu. And those who fall into his grasp, if they bc too long for the bed, have their legs chopped off to the right length, and if they be too short are put on a rack and stretched. So much can be done to improve the lot of our fellow citizens in this Dominion. But lct its not approach the problem from Procrustcs’ point of view. Accepting facts as they are, lct its build the bed to fit the dimensions 0f the citizen instead of trying to change the citizen to fit the bed. For one thing, it is easier, and for aiiotlicr thing, it is more comfortable for the citizen. i- EDITORIAL NOTES - Bccattie conscription for overseas is on the Statute Book in itzinic only, it is znttttittiint-il that married men, or l8 year olds, will bc culled up for service. The pity of it, the necessity for it. i!!! This, too, in the time of wzir. Long Island University has inattgttrzited compulsory intra- mural competition in basketball. handball, iti- door baseball and horseshoe pitching to keep the students physically fit. a- 4- Ill it His lkfajetsy King George VI acceded to the throne this date, 1936; his royal brother, Ed- ward VIII, abdicated on that date with a victv to marrying Mrs. Wallis Warfield, whom ltc described in his abdication message as “the wo- man I love"; in the choice bctwccti love and duty he chose the foriuer; was crcatctl Dulce of \Vindsor, and is now Governor and Continuu- der-in-chief of the Bahama Islands, B.\V.I.: George VI was crowned with Queen Elizabeth at Westminster on May 12, i937. i 1F i M Whether in harness or out of it the Rt. Hon. Arthur Meighen will always be a. leader. ln our present undemocratic days it is not always the real leaders who are publicly assigned these positions; plots and counter-plots are started to further particular interests, with the result that as an outcome, a compromise leader is somctimcs elected, one who does not shepherd but follows the sheep. Mr. Bracken recognizes this, hence his determination to impose his terms before allowing his name to go to the ballot. 1U I i M Bcin tried and convicted of fighting the enemy ll something new and unique in military annals. Four Australian soldiers in New Guinea have been court-martiallcd on a charge of fir- ing at the King's enemies without permission. When their battalion went into action, the men. all cooks, were left behind in Port Moresby. Without leave, they joined the troops and fought the j; ere. The courtmartial’: verdict: "_Guilty'. Sentence “Pot: do it again." ' It In true we arc prosper-lug mightily, all the name if our farmers conserve the fodder and feed grain grown this year it is possible to enter upon n two-year program of production of meats “which in from six months to 12 months’ time, depending upon the product concerned," llyc the Federal Minister of Agriculture, "will relult in our being able to supply our own peo- ple with reuonable lupplies of dairy products and meats of all kinds and at the same time supply Britain with the ex cted amounts of cheese and bacon and the nited Stltel with her supplies of beef cattle." 4 l l I U l ‘An independent checkup by Saint john Tele- graph journal of the approximate number of bags of Christmas mail and parcels damaged in the fire on board a llllp in Saint john harbor lut week indicated that two or three hundred bags had suffered, but half or more of these could be salvaged, it was thought. Anpther Canadian Pres: den tch from Ottawa stated that Ottawa postal o ficialr estimated 1,631 bag! had been damaged, and these "mostly by water!" In an Ottawa. despatch Sunday, The Canadian Press interpreted a department statement as meaning the entire cargo of 7,041 bags had suf- fered damage. The mail was en route to Cana- This Arthur Clough had a feclin’ for the States; he - II {L (P555111? ETQWNWQUAIEPJAN __ ___ HDTES RY THE WAY I Dad gels more pleasure out of a‘ tirade-titer dress than mother — Kitchener Record. With the turning of the tide we shall sec now the 5X13 grapples with m, adversity. At ths report Herr lilt- r was running out of patience. iras and Aiilcu, respectively -Stratford beacon-detain. . "By returning to cotton hose,- Arm- erlcan women will obtain more com- ioi-r and fewer goose pmiplcs." av-. ers tne Chicago news. Only a titers man's opinion of CCILYSB.—SII'ELIOTG_ isencoii-rlerald. - I Hitler can still lick anyone on etutli, he tells the Munlcn crowd, For a fellow who never drinks. the Puehrei’ sure works; himself into the barrocni mood. —Derroit NewsX A farmer in Huron County found hnnscii in trouble. When his silo was filled it toppled over, skewing the content; over the ground. Ne ghbors —1~eal neighbors, which means more than me people who .l\'6 next door —heard of It. They did more They came over. More still they 110'. only syinputhizcd with the unfortunate agrlcultui-ist, but went to work. They set the silo up as it should be, repaired the dam- age and proceeded with the business of retiring it, and within 24 hours of the tine the silo fell, it was up. wcputztti and ruddy for the (lays of winter iecdttig. A lucky man lie was to live in that community. -Guelpl1 Mercury. Opinions differ a: to whether Mussolnt coughed during his speech to the Itulititi people. However" Hit- ler. noting the tone of hi5 lll0ULll-, incs. probably wishes he had chok- ed, Windsor Star. Even Mrs. Roosevelt hedged on the President's suggestion that old coffee grounds he dried and te- bretlvecl. He "thinks" he i5 a coffee expert, she said. True. a hot, brown brew ciin be made as the President suggests. Such a coitcoction can also be made fiom chicory, dandelion root. sweet imtnlocs or rye. But ls it coffee? Never! It's high zine scnic one said blitntly that all sucli expudents lend clown the devious JYPIllllS of SllbSLLUllOll. Coffee ls an essence vo.titllc,. elusive. That essence is freed from the ground bean when first the hot water seeps over rind thrcugh it, For a time the essence lzugcrs to favor and vivify the brew", but. evcn a reheating banislics it. Re-brew the grounds and there ls no essence at all; the tiroduct tastes as brown and lifeless n5 it looks. Honest coffee cun be triace in many ways. Grandmother brewed it lii it pot rind “scttled" it with the uthltc cf an eggi The nlULllllfllllf-‘l’ brews it strong enough to flout a sliver dollar; his wife, WW1 8 more icf ncd palate. tests her coffee w.th a ha f-dollar instead. The South American demands it "hot as hell. black as night. sweet as a lover's kiss " But strong or mild, with stigiir, crcntu, milk 01' neat, holiest coffee can be brcwed 0111i’ uflien one starts with coffee, Rationing w ll liicvitably bring sub- stitutes; bttt that need not drown integrity in the dark b.own depths. . Etishriitc the honest cup. Cherish it Keep it’ pure And lsten with deep skeptiitn to the offhand schemes of all those who merely “thlnk" they are coffee experts. Their intentions may be honorable, but their works betaziy them. -.New York Times. , Christmas Eve has always meant much to Germans. Every fninily feasted and looked forward to a cheerful new year. Accordingly, Hlf-lerls government "5 doing its best to make the most of the traditional spirit. Thee are to be special rations fcr the clviian population and one K110 0f D9115 01‘ beans. one of flour and sugar and a large sausage for every soldier on leave, while Qzcchs. P°1°8 GYBek-i- Frenchmen and Yugoslavlans starve, A11 this, Ger. mans are already told, ls made pos. slble by gcod hmvests at home and the exportation of occupied coun-. tries. ’I‘hus are conquest and Hit-i lers coitceptlon of peace on earthi and good-will toward men content themselves with this? They know that the little extra meat to he doled out come; from catbe slanghg. cred for lack oi’ fodder, that; six million foreigners who are forced to labor must be fed. that thousand; at Ukrainians and Russians brought Int/o Germany must be provided with shoes, that the health of’ the country l: in l. precarious state, and that; the strictest control i5 necesgm-y even In foreign countries to pre- vent inflation, Worst of all 1.; the Problem of national health. With °II1Y “wvllilhyslcfan left for every! 13.000 cl fans, Germany faces a‘ medical collapse which must have far-reaching effects on war pm. ductlon. . . The death rate for live births and for the use croup be. tween one and 20 years has been rlllnir ulflmlntzlv. Despite the at- m on the church Germans will alng “Stlllo Nacht... Helllgo Nacht" l4 0f Pore. But this Christmas Eve will be neither tranquil nor holy) The older generation will heave n nostalgic sish when it contrasts ii, with its predcessor: of happier times. "Stills Nacht, Helllge Nldlt" —the sentiment must seem a mock. cry now. And nli because n ruling clique led by n fanatic has yet to discover that the precepts a1 the great religions express age-om con. vlctlona of civilized mankind and stand for something more than the imaginary prodestlnatfon of any om nation to rub tho world .— New York Times. Thls In probably the story to end all stories about suzar rationing, but we like it because its true. dian service men overseas. Post office officials There's a. man in the RDA building again took occasion to warn Canadians against sending inflammable materials through the mails. a a a n- History l| being made at such a speed these days that one hardly realizes that lt was but yesterday jules jeannency and Edouard Her- riott, presidents of the French Senate and Chamber warned Petain and Laval in an extra- ordinary document against drawing France into the war on the side 0f the Axis. The soul 4nd honour of France they declared would not tol- erate the final shameless betrayal of the country; and the warning has been followed by the suicide of the French fleet, a fulfilment of the threat "of the Presidents that if Pctain even moved further" toward llitler he would be moving as a dictator, forfeiting the last respect of the real who lunches every day ln one of this, Centre restaurants. ws m; down beside him the other day and saw him wrefully pocket the one lump of sugar that came with his coffee. “You see," he explained, "I'm taking It for a horse. It's just a delivery horse but I've become very 91inch M. tached to him and every day he looks for n lump of solar. I can go without it. but the horse wouldn't. He'd think I was mud at him or fitmcthlns." - Rrockfeller Oentro Magazine. Do you pcrhnpc remember I dll- cussion about the "correct" way to sit In a bath. whether facing the tans or back to them? I have been‘ reminded of it. lately slnoc the marking of Plmsoll lines in baths. At that earlier time, being oungi mitt easily led. I changed my sbltsi and faced the taps. Now, being older, and colrle" I have reverted to France, ilit- Franco tliiii has blossomed iii Africa. and that will live after ihc present crcw nf wreckcrs and bctrztycrs have been swept away. Daily the prophecy is being fulfilled, I I ‘F former custom he water la a little UUPDPI‘ rind winner at the tap end. A Gallup poll now might yleld 0th- cr and more intcrcstln hints on how iu keep warm whlo bathing- M811 Master Guardian. I n . would have Justlfled. Wlll the German pcopietby Why Food Subsidies? (In The wmnlvegxrm Prev-t By Grant xlcr (YPPAWA: fin the ceaseless fliht against inflation, the governments declsl m reduce by subsidy the price of milk, oran I. to: Ind cof- foc will emerge n equal In imposition of the rtance to the prloe ceiling Itself. e lfllllU" cement means hhn the campaign against inflation 1s beoornlng more tense and more perilous. A year ago it was the attle of the price oe . There followed M; once, the butt e of the "squeeze." Now‘ a new struggle begins-the cost o! llvlne battle. A few weeks or months hence, another and cquall vital strut: le will begun-the be o for essent a] produtalon. t d. m“ m precen y u z c change In policy on ‘Ilhuraday Wll due to pressure on the ce cell- Ing which would have rlven the lcost of llvlgigdilndex upwards and made an tlonal wage bonus payable In January. Unless meas- ures were taken to relilevc this pressure, the lnflatlonal spiral would have begtm next month. The bonus, which is equal to $85 millions for each point of rlse In the cost of llvlng index (and there would have been a one point rise), would have Increased the pressure on the price ceiling by increasing the costs of production all along the line. Consumers‘ goods would have cost more to make: mlmlfllmfl and war supplies would have cost more to produce. At some polnhand probably 110i? very far away, one of two th s had m haPPen clvlllan production: either the price ceiling would have been broken 0r manu acturers and producers would have gone broke; . The Immediate pressure on the price ceiling came from food-stuffs and its dominant influence 1| shown by the rise in the cost of living index since last July. Actu- ally, July should be the yearly’ peak and when the index cllmbtd .8 in October, danger signals were flying. To ease the pressure, the gov- ernment dld not. attack the acvual pressure points-eggs, beef, etc.- uie government moved In on other items affecting the 00st. of living which were susceptible to speefly rind elllCl-cllb sllDSIdy. Tea and coffee are imported solely by the government, and payment 0f sub- sicly ls no administrative problem. Milk and oranges are also easily handled. By reducing the prices of these foodstuffs, the pressures will be offset and the rise the cost. of living to the point where an additional wage bonus must be paid in January will be avold;d. The answer to the criticism that other and more nourishing fcod- stuffs than tea and coffee .ml8hl~ have been chosen for subsidy 1g- notcs the problem of administra- tion. This was a crisis decision. and other items like beet will pro- bably be dealt with tn slmlllar fash- lon ln due course. The cost of these subsidies will be $40,000,000 per year. The sub- sidiss now being paid under the price ceiling-largely for uicieastd shipping costs-run to about $60 millions per year. The price cell- lng-subsldy policy, therefore ,ls now costing the taxpayers $100 trillllons a. year and may well rise a5 the pressure increases. Under the tax structure this sum ls spread over the people fairly, on the ability to pay. 1f the anti-infla- tionary policy was abandoned and the price increases were allowed to pass directly to consumers, no fttlr division would be possible- All persons not Pfviecfed by the bonus or receiving the price tn- crcases would suffer. On the other hand. 1t the pres- sure was blindly resisted and the ceiling maintained at all cost. essential production would fall awn because people could not pro uce at a loss. colt The important. t In the new policy, there ore, ls that the. government has shifted the emphasis from prloe control as such, to control of the cost of llv- ing and the obtaining of essential civilian goods. If the rcssure ln- creases. the subsidy pol cv will be absence of prloc control, the experience in the l and In the United States In the present war. the cost of living in- dex ln the year ending December l. I042 (the first. year of the oefllng) would have risen l5 points instead AND SILVERS. t 0f 1n: PAYS man m as. CASH AT c BUYING run THE OFFICE OF W. CHESTER S. McLllRE .i , . . FUR BUYER COMING -of t’! fntl. Oclctila esch Int at?» mllllonl, whiz: ll tbol ratc- yoti have a conserve», tlvc idol of what. the h" saved the consumers-about 8450; s In costs of would have cent all costs and ‘"9" “m” 3'3""? . ' Buck of the lmmedfatc c? subsidizing four food 081118. there ll the oompiex Problem of price control Ln neral. Obviously the over-all prce oellfmr Will dlmfntlh fu Importance la the WM‘ cont-hum. The mason: In obvious: the over-all ceiling was only prac- ticable l0 long as production. con- tinued at a. high level. The volume of production 1n any plant controls the oost of the output. The first yen: of the ceiling was n period of maximum reduction. But as war Industry ta peak production. there will be ahortwflea of materials and of labor In clvfllan fildléfibflfiu. We: industry must come rs . Rfifight now manufacturers clv an oods are flndfnii It crculng difficult to maintain out- put, and, u they fall to do s0. their coats In going up. Th crushed aealnst the ling. Thus the task of deciding what is esentlal in wartime ls arising in a new form-not as a means o! freckle labor for the arm and war industry but main in trhe clvlllnn life of the country. 1t was made clear by Mr. Ilsley that where the Out-Put Ls not essential, the manufacturer will have to. close down. No subsidies will be pold and no Drlce increases will be oer- mltted But where the output Is Nfifllil-l. the increase ln costs all: 13w to be admitted and taken ii i "HIM ma BIIIIMJTIII aims. ll. .I. inMABllll OPTOMETRIST Montague. P. l. I. urflco flours: l0 u; l! I to s r u. T u tlollda r etc. ov unnolntmcnt 0f Ice Connected with DRUGSTOIIE f g Appreciate Say “Merry Christmas" lfh rifts that are sure to pig... Keystone Brush, (lamb ‘my Mirror Set; $14. to $18. M"?! Mlmflfv Sell. Brawn Blld B g $6.00 Q0 $15.00 Yardley‘; Makhup s“! m. Ladies -— $2.00 lo sl0.0i' EVEN"! In Paris Make-Up S"! — - sue. t» $l0.0tl Ashes of Roses Make-ll 9'" - - $1.15 t» Sllhllli 13°F"?! "3 Secret" Mflkg-Up ThSels - - - 60o lo $10 00 rec Flowers Make - Up 5% — — -— $3.25 t» $1.50 Woodhury’ M k _ _ 9"} -— '- —l8lTo ti. siiiili "W" fl {WEIR-Up Sm - $1.00 Y"‘"°Y_= Shavlnr Bowl $1.25 Yardley! Shaving [mum '- - -— — — —85c and $1.45 Slms Shaving Brushes _ -' — —- $1.25 to I5.00 Dunhlll Pipes, Llshtgrg- m‘, lfflfte Canes. and many other practical glfts which makes l‘ "l! l0 choose from. Clll and sec our large dls- till! of auorted gllts. THE TWO MAGS Qfilt. 7- - ‘ ifi-irhblltihitk lrlllplpiiii IWWIIKIIIIXIIIHIRIDBT - E Li. FRITZ WEISSLER WANTS RED FOXES, MUSKRATS, RACOONS, Mr. I. Weininger From Montreal Will Start Immediately Buy-L l ing Silver Foxes, Mink, Muskrat, etc., at F. ll. Maclaliio’: Showrooms Charlottetown, P. E. -I. llfl-D-ll I bcccmncnpu, ,9 DECEMBER 20"‘ FOR [Dfilll DELIVERY CHRISTMAS DllY Published by authority of Hon. William P. Mulock, K.C., M.P. Postmaster General Attention ! VETERHNS 0f 1914-18 a You r are needed to help win THIS War, too! IF YOU are physically fit.. .have not reached your 55th birthday .. served in the Empire armed forces during the War of l9l4-l918...nre a British subject...then join the Veterans’ Guard svhere your army training and experience ls needed to perform difficult war tasks both at home and abroad. fhe Veterans’ Guard is made up entirely of your old buddies fighting once again for Freedom. J oln them to help save our Freedom. Joln the Veterans‘ Guard TODAY. YOUR EXPERIENCE IS VALUABLE USE IT TO HELP CANADA‘... JOIN VETERANS’ G U A R D or CANADA Full Information from YOUR LOCAL RECRUITING ‘CENTRE at You-mouth, Kcntvlllc, Trill-o, New Glngow, Sydney, Churloitcw" HALIFAX — Cogswell Street, next to hoslllllll SILVER FDX PELTS WANTED It ls our business to market your furs. We P" cash advances at once. No waiting. Fox farmewr: please give us the opportunity to help Y0". ""1, t will satisfy you that our marketing service ls the cir- Rcferences. Ask any shipper, or, Canadian B10‘ of Commerce. Bring or ship your furs to us. We DRY ""3 w pressage and supply bags. MARITIME FllR PDDL F. R. McLAINE, Local Representative THIS IS THE YEAR T0 SHIP