— --—--‘-. _. v ’arr_na - ,,\,_1_ .- .. .1 ._ :~1_= -‘ r. 1.-.: .";w...: 1w ..';J.-:---.' -~.- ‘.Dw1J'r\|1 _.+>.-.:.-.-i.:.-~r. -go.-;.u-1<;.s'.;_r~i,.< m mrsaxuw -n__<-¢-n T sure work better-a a qood lune/z ” “WHEN l have to carry my lunch to work I am always thankful my wife bakes bread with REGAL Flour. No other bread I've ever tasted is so satisfying, and believe me that’: very important when a man's doing heavy work. My wife says it's because REGAL has more solid nourish- ment in it than ordi- naryfiour. Believe me, REGAL makes bread that tastes better, too." AUBURN SCHOOL Honor R01 for the month oi Iilvlliibcr: Grad‘ X-l. Lima MacNeill; 2. .\I.ie Qilllll]. Grade IX—-l. Marv Boylan; I. Reta. Callaghan. Grade VIII-l, Catherine Mac- Neill and Billy McKenna lequali; ‘Si. Frank Roach: 2. Joseph Boy. n. Grade vii-i. Lorrie McKennag I. George McKenzie. Grade VI-l RomaXMZaoNeill: 3. ant-es McCarron; 3. Theresa nee. Grade V-l. (mtherlne Boylan. Grade 1'V—1. Theresa Oorrigan; l. bouts McKenzie. Grade I-i. Richard MacNeill: I. Elizabeth McGaughey. Perfect attendance: Mary Boy- lan, George McKenzie, Billy Mc- Kenna, Lorne McKenna. Cather- ine Boyian, Louis McKenzie. Irene Curley, Teacher. ~\\\ ,Zj1‘€>2f . . Buying daily Live and dressed Poultry Paying Top Market Prices Correct Grading. Prompt Returns ISLAND COLD STORAGE v company, LTD. QIO< Fox MEAT Fresh Frozen BEEF Till" 50's — -— —- — — — — c Fresh Frozen CALF TRIPE 50's — — — — — — — 3%‘: Fresh Frozen Ground MEAT 50's — — — — — — — - 5‘ ALSO Horse meot 8. Boneless Beef Above prices lowest in Conodo ISLAND COLD. STORAGE CO LTD. 0+¢++o++o¢++e+o+++4++++o Profes A n. r. ARBHIBALD Chartered Accountant no Richmond Street Phone 41. P. o. Bu: ll- f- _ _ ~_____ ___,/_. McLeod 8. Bentley . E. BENTLEY. It 0- rn. BENTLEY. u. c. _ _C. F. BENTLEY, LLB. pminm and Attorney-evil! MONEY T0 tom 180 V RichrnondwSl-Ieflj MncGuigan 1S. Tramor B. MacGUlGAN. ILC. CLAIR TRAINOR. B-A- Barristers, Solicitors. Em MONEY TO LOAN Qflloe: Over Provincial Bank. lichrnond Street, ChnrlottotoILn_ Palmer 8. Hashim H. J. PALMER. K-c- A. J. HASLAM. BA,‘ LLB- BARRISTER. E C. of Nova Scotia Chl-mllol’! Charlottetown, P.E.l. MONEY T0 LOAN g e as PEQ-Jillll Culcliffe 6. Andrews u ERAL mnscwons F firm aivrnlimsns Ilntor River and in. r. McDHEE. BA. K.C. NOTARY so. IIARBISTEB. sOLICITOB 11am»: __ °"':'.'.*.""1" | T'TTTAUT Bell 8. Malhieson ll l). L. M thleeou, LLB- ‘ ‘Ilgerrlstm and llollclton . Money T0 LOAN Xenon Noel. Ohsrlottewwmhll- ' sential framework oi civilized soc” American "I can't lace the expense Pl "n" “Ls though you had a chqwe MW» Not a bit of it! You owe it to me.. at did you bring fne lntowth I world ior? To let me down now. eyllisrs. Whitlow had been watching; Ihed disputants. “Rudle, dear. she‘ i . :“3id I ask to be born?" said Eliiidie!" she said and put her hand on his. - He snatched his tis‘ awal‘ "OW!" Rncliel Rudieurot! It makes me sick." "Ll ten. Rudic" l He glared at her. "Maybe we could manage ll. lvlavbe-J‘ . "What?" ~ “There's my insurance-J’ l “W0lI?" "ll V115 nlvrays meant for you." "And the others." correctrd Rather. "Never mind him," said Rudie. “Tell me." Vothci- made a haltins explan- n ion. Tlic nclirv had a surrender iaiuc. It mush: make llllllgS 111.»- siblc. "But the other boys-J“ nmtcstrtl- Father. "You give me mv chance.“ sazd Rudie. "and I'll carry the damned lot of .\'0u—I'll be an omnibus camel . for the whole blessed family. Trim mo. Bu’. if I can't take u? there; .‘(‘l‘lOlB!‘5llil)S, I'm done I‘ll b on" my brains ou- I'll throw myself into the canal. And I'll leave a letter to scald the skin oi! you." _ "I'm sure you'll do yourself JUS- tlce. Rudie," said his mother gently, "if you have half a chalice." _ And so he was able to do himself justice. and the larize white bilious lace with the permanent. resentful scowl. frequented The s reels of Camiord beneath the exiguous tas- sel of a second-hand mortar-board can. for {our hardy and strenuous years. CPHE LEADER BEGINS DISCOVER HIMSELF While Rud Whitlow pursued his studies at Camtord. such as they were. ihc disintegration of the civ- ilization into WhZCll he had been born went on s eadily. Human scc- iety had iri fact been progressing too fast: it had slipped up on mechanism and dislocated its class TO Story of a World Dictator By n. c. WELLS Copyright. him. Apparently the whole system (Oonflnued) t Itense exasperation when people of things had >COlLDlf€d to anticl- Eéyou hear? You owe it to mee. gggathlfiirfléb‘ Tears oi indignation shone in his‘ _ was like the w ore tailing one I938. by The North f1 Newspaper Alliance, Inc. d 1h h it as nights and he betrayed B" 1n- an w“ p h d made banal remarks about i. to a “one or lions and corner and tummy things their orientation bar. It was like bits oi’ crumbling ux, This sense of insecurity spreading about the en‘ire planet the things they usually did. t haPDY-RO-lucky “all-right" ieellng, that had hitherto sustained normal men. They went on doing ‘heir cus- stcni o! was drifting. I: ay particles change in a magnetized after another into a was “They o lievlng, THE_ Ql-VIAABIQTTEIOWN GUARDIAN l But indeed the whole things was not thinking o Rud at l. It was thinking and thinking very incoherentlv about ltselr. More and more o! the two thousand mil- lion or so who constituted human- ity were tailing into very much the same line o! thought and feeling as that aioniz which They tried to believe. and man succeed in be would presently be a turn for the better. ‘They did nothing to about that tum {or the better; they just. hoped it would occur. All the same they were worried. was very seriously worried. He had no disposition to believe in the nat- ural ben%olence o! the universe. that ht not to have let lhlngs come to t i=." he said. but never very clear even to hlmsel! or why mIdICgO were nor what. he wu did it. He'd set even with them some- here how. There had been a time when camiord was the very heart or oon- servatism. It was a bilateral con- servatism in those days-aud one hall of it was called the Liberal Party. It dominated the country without eifort as a matter oi course. Its only use tor subversive ideas was the ofiporounities they al- iorded for priv eged rags. People with revolutionary minds and “ad- vanced" notions were invited ".0 ad- Rud who . DECEMBER s. 193; Splendid Cough Readily Easily Mixed at E’; S0 EQSYl Make; a Big Saving. No Cooking. To get gulch relief fr di t cough, mix your own rggedy a131,": HD1113 form, 11 k on tlirlivdt lnlelglvlvgfllloelhits pmmm "film u! the Pine! into a 1n n _ " ur times as mug], "This’ was. me person or per- dress meetings and conduct de- Once tried, you'll say it's your {av it cine loi- your mon . It “llilsli medi m“ "°“‘°"“°.‘.25 aeuaazis.ize.ablimei...sl nalraaissas*saia'is‘nrli ~=<**=e~----~=~»'~°=»i - ' - - guic , ed we moane- me egg‘ ggowiggengblzgggwygsgiengg}; ll‘..‘.i‘°.iié‘°f.i.l’§é‘.ftl.lé’.f.°.ll.‘l.'l?l.lli tally». "fife; mun i; 2 g legfjdim g1» we“ xiii l. iiiiiill... Derson persons in Dartioular. It 6h RHKhOIPUB-S- p “m” ' ‘"5" ‘n °"° c" l’! b ' . Isil L“ l." a ‘my Um m only heqlcould find who it. was had ‘gut when Rudie went up, those X’§§§d“cf,fi,‘}'d'§§";tf"§- "M" "0 Ved- uslness t “Se” ‘hi’ P111021 a because they could ouT ouR w.“ T‘ TO JUMP THOUGHT ~ n’ Qt...- ’/// x 7"». t‘ com 1918 Iv NEA seams. Int. I wgs weolule l‘ AND RUN, BUT I ONLY some TO SNEEZE! - lTBy J. TR: OUT HE WAS AW?! ‘I GOT A MOUTHFULJ I WAS JUST TAKING» A DEEP BREATH ‘TO HOLD BUT WASMT QUICK suoueu QfiQ-w lat-A M5 geglected ttddo something. or hag - one some n wron or ess not think of anything else i0 do. l about mm umfgs‘ that; wouldmcawhl books’ but behold! they we” over. Williams "Tl golden days were already ancient iistory. He had read about them in WE WANT A MUZZLE o cooking needed. The! set 2 ounces o! Pi x fr ist. ‘This is a conipdluend cg: u. i 't t a ‘"' ‘Wk ....‘3...'.'.'.."'Ei...§‘i€”$f.i.’l§”a.““"i i’ auiiulscetts YOIiIt get restful slat-IL "s easy, l. . "W87 Pinoyin concentrated money will bl; any dru __iContlnucd on; pegeiltl: 4) w; limb?‘ k _ OUR BOARDING HOUSE _ w; t Pleased. you, - Major Hoopla i=ol= A BIG MONOREI. ---HE'§ 601' ‘THREE Cl-HMS AUD A BUL- Bous QCHNOZZLEMA- HE eo-r HIPPED av A DOG AND we AREN'T , ‘TAKIM’ AMY CHANCES l AND we WANT . /,f "f0 ‘FRY mess Muzzaes AND SEE n: one WILL. i=|T_/ -~AHD A touo BARK. Am: H55 ALWAYS BITIHG oi=i= MORE THAN HE CAN CHEW! KIND ul=l= A DOG Ii DOT MIT TREE CHHQQ LJHD A MUZZLE so BIC’! ? You Mme A DEPOSIT LlklD You ‘TRY DEM . OM, YAl-i 2 ' ACH , VOT I l l I l PLAYING ' SAFE = discipline and traditions. It was in a bad way; it was possibly in need of a major operation. iory was basing into a new and very per- plexing phase. The scale and pace of life had altered and mental habits had failed to keep pace with the alteration. The social cog-wheels were railing to mesh with one an- other and they ground and jammed more and more violently. Al first he did not apprehend this at all clearly, ‘but the perception of it seeped into his mind. l Mankind put to the test was in- deed displaying the most extraor- dinary _ inadaptabillty, politically, economically, educationally. The sole ideas Ioi- relieving tension that anyone seemed able to entertain were the suicidal alternatives of blind social insurrection to shift the stresses to other classes on the one hand, or aggressive war to shirt the stresses to other nations on the other. No one seemed to think of relieving the stresses. One resound- ing crack followed another in the mighty edifice of confidence and traditional usage which was the es- , lety, Abyss after abyss vawned open wider and wider. Insecurity ap- pe at the most unexpected points. And amidst it, like an ant in an earthquake. our hero ran about and grew up. It. did not take him long to realize the advancing malaise oi his world. Hint of disillusionment impalpable but cumulative, gathered in his consciousness. Doubt accumulated ln his mind and would not be dis- pelled. The ladder of academic com- petition and o! promotion to as- surance and dazzling o porturiity, that he had storied to cl mb. which by all precedents should have made him more or less a member of a de- finite governing class and opened the door to legal distinction or oli- tioal opportunit -or at very east tothe higher c vil service and sec- urrty-acquired a qualitv of unreal- i‘y, became less and less credible until lit times it seemed more like some inaccoslble “spiral staircase seen lnthe central incmndescciice oi a burning house than a permanent method of ascent. CHAPTER 1V. FIRST FLIGHT It was hard for Rud to believe WITH MAGGIE? l THOUGHT SHE WAS GLAD THAT SHE DOESNVT HAVE TO SERVE ON THE JUIZY ANYMOIZE- TlPPlEHand l-cav" siuss PEEVED BECAUSE YOU AQE NOT ON . THE JUQY? OUQ SON THATS MAR BUT-MAGGIE- CAN'T EXPECT HER O FOLLOW YOU IN EVERYTHING- A GUN! RIBLE SAXOPHONE FOR A GUN- \l f WE HAVE TO BUY SOME NEW CHAIRS. T _ . HE'LL GIVE UP THAT HOR‘ MILT STUIBBS! YOU LET HIM KEEP THAT SAXOPHONE —NO\X/ YOU GET lT AWAY FROM HIM ll ‘nl/A |'o RATHER cous- IN MlLLlE MOVED INTO ‘M NEW HOUSE WITH us THAN THAT HORN! ~ I 11- that he oi’ all people had misjudged his world, that even now thh‘ he had not to Comioi-d ll was going to be a much more ditficul; word than. he_had supposed. He thought nlinut nAvE Y0lI A BAD GOLD?' Thimble Theatre. Starring POPEYE-- 1w... Shoiring-—“About Face, PopeyeV-Tomorroir-W "The Boy They ruorft Leave Behind.” \V4LuVL¢_;u.s.rn.orr BORN THlRTY ‘TOO ;1.s J ‘2-"8 . p] amncmc up FATHER By George lMcManu; _ _ _ Y __i V > W _ A > _‘ NOW-WHAT'S TH' MATTEQ AQE YOU NQ-FJDEED“ VMITFHNKING Cl: MAGGIE-WOULD YOU MIND SENDIN’ LJPA CUP OF‘ COFFEE? IT i5 GETTING CHILLY UP HEQE- BY Edwina A 1 l MEAN l1‘, MARY. SOMETHIN'S GO- me TO HAPPEN TO THAT HORN on I'M LEAVlN'! ' d” Service, Inc. (HE otows LIKE WELL. HE‘ IS A DE-MING »-\"’\ m ‘ J _v__ ' \\’_\'\'\ >\-\__ ’\ \ C‘ I wfifirfl i “w. ‘a §'\?-f'”'\<\ KING CABOOSO OF CUSPlDONlA IS PHONHJG ‘IOU POPEVE, PLEASE COME TO MY COUNTRY RlGl-IT AWAY - THE PooEv uouuo IS $TlLL MAKlNG" ‘ ls Your Gliesl m: Does Breathing llurl‘! What you need is n vigorous rub- bing o! the neck und chest with NERVILINE — u powerful linimant that quickly sinks into the tissues sud which is nblo to lltuclt the con- ootion It its ve source. Tau [oi hat roll from NERVILINI —- undor its soothing influence tho chest pains disappear. Once again you breathe freely. All sense of sonnuu und discomfort goes away. It you ha un ache or u pain that n nod linirnent can dislod|e, use NITKVILINE: try it for hina luck, luuabugo, Journalism — rub it in will, and at the sumo time you rub (be Pub-away. Sold by all chemists. TILLIE THE TOlLER-— JUST ANOTHER ATTRACTION. By Westuver IT BELONGS TO ANDY, MR. SIMPKINS MAC TAKE THAT CONFOUNDED MUSIC- BOX OUT OF HERE ‘i I DON'T CARE WHO IT BELONGS TO~IT'S GOING OUT OF THIS OFFICE.» ANSWER YOUR ‘PHONE IT'S A POLICE MAN~HE ‘SAYS SOME- BODY HERE IS BLOCKING STREET TRAFFIC-I. DON'T 6ST HIM SO HE'S STANDING ON A LEDGE OUT- SIDE OUR OFFICE WINDOWJS HE FALL RIGHT, OFFICER,THANKS FOR LETTING ME KNOW~VLL TAKE CARE OF HIM..- GOOD-BYE