unearthed on which "I go-carts, babies’ rattles and ciappers .<- the great classical writers do not ' forget the children; Pauszlnills ioil- y exquisite workmanship; Arist-apilnn- I . "obulus"; " horses, and Pinlo, bulltliilg bricks. TliE GHARLUTTET OWN GUARDIAN liiTES Elli wilv Pr>~i|d!n‘" l. ‘wt wUIYQ Editors-Frank iilll s‘ xleLum M. P. .r--lary—-LleuL-Col. D. A. MleKtllnon, D. B. l‘ i-iur and Managing Director-J. R. fiurucrl Vice President-J. R. Burnett O. Walker lnll D. K. (‘nrric I logging Uhily (founded 1587) $5.00 per year (in advance) delivered, 84.50 per year iin advance) mail-ad in Canada lad United States. ADVERTISING RE UlfiTIDlTATES-Tbe Beckwitb Special Agency ll\c._ New York Central llltijul‘ source of the world's econ- ‘Gilli; troubles. such all attitude as Building. New York City General Mote h], Klnnn City, Wlilougilhy Tower Building Glenn ltuillllng.Atlllnta; Building. St. Louis; Inncilco; 1135 No_ 65th Street Morning Phil! d PRESIIJNTATIVEB interstate lflllilt 'l‘rllsi Elli rs Bu\|lllng_ Detroit (‘hicilgoz Syndicate Uouuduock Building, elphin Maxim lame people are so polished that they cast reflections on others. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1332 HOOVER IIIIJSSAGE President Hoover's Congress, published iii full ill yes- terday's Guardian. strzkcs a ilepeful note oi co-operntioil. a‘. least in so far as concerns United Slates‘ at- in cssagc l0 zitucle to (iebtor mnoll; that have: fought to nwe; then" m: dub; pay-y merits. Afr. ilorlv-n’, ‘of course. is on the eve of 1nd the policy 111.: successor, Presidcil" :1 1)‘ rwn-ngl lelt, has yicl. to be :l-iilv-.ii‘cctl But it tila‘. the lv:l1 be in line with] lTfilYPlli" ll: [mp1 01111-0, ..f ell-i l-‘izl... lan be safely‘ assilrmd Roosevelt poll" ihe Hoover mt‘. l". it tvfrl be re- ialicd that. falllo": :31» I‘I‘L‘.’il(1t*i1- tinl election, a coztft-iw-llve took place between the two leaders. and foubtlcss tile q» foreign policy: w. s : ._ that time. ‘e is 200d reason therefore t0 believe that United ltd-ten will follow the precedent of U-neat Britain in maintaining s con- lfstent course in foreign relations, irrespective of political changes at home. This precedent was created by Gladstone at the blegliining of his third administration. Lord‘ Roeebery mu appointed hfznist-er I 70min) Affair! in u] in!!! Salisbury. 1M1 o.‘ .-\11l-*t'1cn‘s scd at (V4 when fission “l0 CHRISTMAS TOYS Where dou Santa get. his Christ- mas toys? This question is of liitle concern to youngsters provided the toys arrive on scheduled time, but the answer. its furnished by the Its-view. for grown-ups. National Revenue makes interesting reading Many toys, of course, are niridi- in Canada, but u. gimvcr pun. of the contents of Santa's 115'.‘ 1:4 lrnihl-red from all part; of 11:.» l: 1i. espcrr lolly from the Ui1izeli .‘ Germany. In the pm: f" vérlr toy mporfa. not including dole, were valued at $1,333,384. 'I'nis total was made up as foilow.~.:-~Unitccl States $541385. Genrlany $429308. United Kingdom 8184.805, Japan $137,147, Cliche-Slovakia $173M, France IILIBU. Dolls lmpfifit-d in the past fiscal year were valued at $155236, And came chiefly from Germany. The Dominion exported in the same DIHOd tcvyl of ail kinds valued at 30.192. an increase of $1,850 over dmliu exports in the previous year.‘ tn recent. years the plfnclpnl buyers of Canadian toys were the til-died Btates, Newfoundland and New Denland. Ebrports to those countries have dropped considembly in the hat fiscal year. The decrease was ‘("1 and non than balanced however, by increased exports to the United Klnpdoln which Dlll‘l"l1f\S(‘(l toy; from Canada to tn- ‘,'i!lil" of H8282, as against enght hundred dollars‘ worth in the prev- ious year. These relics of child life ‘.11 the form of toys have 001119 (lolvn in ul from very ancient tinlcs, not billy in actual playthings but, also, 1n nrt and books. Grccl; vzwes have DCCH are depcl-cd about shaped like hens and birds. Even ing us about a doll: ivory bed of ll mentioning a little WfIgOII bought in the mnrkct at, Athens for one Horace praising hobby In the Middle Ages tin soldiers were most in vogue, and ingeniously constructed tin horses which could 7' be made to tilt. From the seven- teenth century ollxvnl-d, dolls hous- - rs sccm to have been one of tho dflllghis,‘ of chlltlllrlrtl. 'l‘1";1vrllr~r.\' in Ellrfiilf.‘ luny rvc 11L l1. r1121, Luizlluil, uilrl Nllwnlbrl"; ills lot-til l. of min- luillrc iiiiii‘ mill P‘(4\ pllly- ill. t]; ill I13; 11-11’ lupb.iilltl:; fol‘ thy 11.1.1); ll-ll; :15 til-lures, 5 l}. ‘i1 flli'lll'll‘l and pretty Germany had a dolli house 111mm and fmnfshed which well shows tilt i. fashions of her day. It was esuvur-i» ‘ ly rich 1n musical instruments, 1111c. had a library. This model little home was left to posterity with the hope that as many children as Dosiblfi‘ would see it as often as possible, wilh the aim and intent to make good housekeepers. The dolls themselves oi those days, ilowcver. were rather disap- They were all grolvn-up pointing. indies, stiff and straight in their bones and busks and old brocades; elaborate creatures for palace life; or else, quaint wooden figures, a little lkc the Dutch dolls that are still to be found in old country homes. But the conquering hosts o! Toy- land are still marching down the centuries, laying. seige each ycnr to homes and hearts, And may they long continue so to do. FIRST EMPIRE’ FLIGHT Twenty-five years ago this month, to be exact on Dec. 13, 1907. an item [appeared in the press to the effect that Dr. Alex Graham Bell's flying machine rose to a considerable 11¢ Eht after being taken from the workshop at Baddeck. ‘The machine, which had not then a motor install» ed but Was used as a. glider, was in Chars! of the late Lieut. Seliridge, U. B, A., for whom Sclfrldge Field, Mount Clements, Mich.. is named. Previous to this, F. W. "Cnscy” Baldwin, a grandson of Hon. Robt. Baldwin, Premier 0i Canada. before Confederation. made what is claim- ed to be one of the first public flights of an aeroplane in North America, when he flew n, machine powered with a gasoline motor at Brldcicck, which was the joint effort of himself as chief engineer, with D1‘. Alex Graham Bell, J. A. D. Mc- Curdy, Glenn R. Curtlss and others who vrsanlzed an effort at Baddcck for the purpose of producing a suc- cessful flying machine. On this flight. March l2, 1907, it is stated the plane which was named the “Red Bird" raced 130 feet then took off and at a general altitude of from ten to twenty feet flew for a distance of 810 feet and eiighted without mishap. In the next flight, he crashed the "Red Bird." Mir. Baldwin designed s. machine, the "White Wing" which made s. world's record flight of 839 yards in 1906. Bnddeck figures prominently in the early history of aviation and the late Dr. Alexander Graham Bell is buried at the top Of the hill overlooking the town and beautiful Bras d'Or Lake, a simple boulder marking h's resting place. CANA DIAN FERTILIZER Canada, notes a leaflet issued by the Federal Department oi Agricul- ture, is now self-supporting in essential fertilizer items. Nitrogen of Canadian manufacture is to be had in abundance in the form of sul- phate of ammonia, new processed cynnnmld containing nitratl. monium phosphate and the organic fertilizers such as tenkage, dried blood and fish meal. Really the only itcm of importance for the manu- facture of mixed fertilizer 0r single appllciltlOn not, produced in this country is potash. Supci-phosphute is made on a large scale at New Westminster, B. 0-, Traill, B. 0., Hamilton. Ontario and Beloeil. Que, and it is gratifying in know that ihc quality or this mp rphosphatc pfOdlKYPd in Canada by virtue of up-to-dntc processes of manufacture, is superior to most foreign supcrphoslvhate in nvilii- ailillty and physical condition. It may be said of the other items that tilcy are at least equal and in some instances superior, to the hifwt quai- am- wii as ("banning ltlcs of other countries In meeting the needs of Canadian fertilizer rc- THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Pvrhzips tllc must disquieting tact .ull.:y 1,- LilC rciilsal oi leaders in curlnin lines o1 cudcavor to admit than. the machine has been the this is blind and reuct-iollary—a.nd Célffillilly’ does not display even an c111 g‘ tuned sclf-iiltcrcst. It requires no great intelligclzcc to understand llllill tllc nlat-llilic lllls clone-and it will continue lo do, if it 1S um» llildm coiltrui in the l1 ' ‘ -:'\ Lt l‘: =i'i‘i.'ll.; _; 1.0 problems appear \1lt_i' l; 11h av .1.-.,.~1i to lose faith in the capacity of L statesmen who gathered at Ollziavn to build bigger markets witliin the Empire. They knew then thll: lilo monetary ques- tion was st Ml». and entered into ugreemcnis 1'11 this knowledge. Wilethcr or is ollc of the mat- -.iicrcd during Mi. in London, Can- l-crtnill that it has atllnns 111.1}: b.- HEVPI‘ (llfiiifiltil nut of sight and 1:1 will bi: found ulti- mau-ly. In i: interval, although Canadian pro c-is are not bringing the returns desired, the market for them in the United Kingdom is growalq- Yillkil to estnlhh 41 bctler foothold. ivert‘ it, possible to shy the same for John 1311111: products in Canada! - SIIilSIHFIiOD in renlz (luvs not 111151151 wear," that it lnllll 1r l, one oflthc greatest 0t Bri- tailrs ti-rltllaolls that although wars ever ll-lliil i101" giving her gold as dust n11:l blood (iii “THEY to achieve Christmas Cards (CnV. F. in the Winnipeg Free Press) During that season of the year when peace on earth good will to men is manifested by the desputch and recent of Christmas and New Years cards (the lattel‘ being | later invention than the former, since they come m hnndy to send to everybody not on your list who _ sent you a Christmas greeting) om i of the most aggravating woes is the l failure to put an address on the card. Some people are the kind of people who always know the addres- ses of their friends. They wriu mom down in e. little book, and do mt what 380v? of ‘ £11m: By lame: W. Barton. MD. DLNTISTS ARE NUW DOCTORS One oi the encouraging signs of the times is the manner in which the public and also physicians look upon the dental profession. It is only perhaps ten or fifteen years ago since dentistry was look- ed upon as a sort of "mechanics? 10w the book later. and wbenthey get new addresses, they add them coilscentiousiy to the list. But most ' people are not built that way. They A think always that they can yemgm-i ber the addresses; and tho-y do mo, until the friends go to live in a place like Edmonton where you have to be a mathematical genius to remem- ber the seven or eight figures in- volved: or perhaps until they go to England where an average ad- dress is The Gables, Bentincl; Mall- ing, by Weevllbury, Lance. It is s- bout that time that you begin to lose track of your friends, and meditate on the, changes timel brings. _ We once had a friend at college whose name was Hem-y Fbrd. He did not. make motor-cars. He play- , ed rugby and dabbled 1n chemistry He "was clever and witty both, and he had the most alluring Floridan accent we have ever heard. To hear Henry my "And how," with the most liquid full rolling of the vow- els was a liberal education in itself. We loved Henry. Then we separab, ca. full of ideas of meeting again? ‘ oil of hostilities fflund l'l;l§1}' to treat her foes; to clear nil pathways: lll zccbnstrtiction. Wary tzoils are no new ; .11. The centuries have, yd with various allies h l-luropcnn autocrac- ies. ,l1t Louis XIV. She fought Nljlcison under revolution-y ary 111x111 c.»- for more than twenty years. But although she ltlvrays emerged vlcirlriolisly, never‘ did she impose 1111111111 ing terms upon her vilnqul ll ciiclllicx, In the war with 1,011.; XIV the telmr, were So tem- ..e as to surprise even .1110 cncil. In i815, alter ilvzlterloo had o\'cl"ll'lr<1v.'11 Nliinlcon, Britain re- fused lo nvcwlt- to the demands of Ru in. l'i'll.u:»'l£t 111111 An. ‘a that crippling Leimxs be illlpusvil upon France. l u has hid-n imppsdlile, rays the l?.1li.l11_l;r~ still, lul" lili‘ Brllhsh GOV- (‘Jllillflltr to urlll 905150;, in rclnsltul of war debts in tilc U11 tcd Slates is no: based on n YDJEJJlIQd opinion which llfvht be ciinilgcd- by a subilt‘ on of i ' argulneilts. 'I‘i11.1_v have ilroccrdcd on the supposition tilllt lilis section of American opilmn was really 1n- tcrested in the issue, when the truth is that the gentlemen who hold lilesc views are for the most part either incapable of understanding the position at all or simply use it for the want oi some better means of convincing their clients that they are "fighting for Anloricsvs inter- est." All the nrgllnlcllls and facts nlako it plain that tileir action is actually working against America's interest, but the prospects of con- vincing them of that W111 be n0 hotter ilcxt June. than they are now. "m, Itlniezly‘! covemnwnt." i! guided by traditions which Permit Executive action. A committee can entry inln rlyrrnmcntsl at a Lausanne conference with reasonable assur- linre that. they vvil be approved by Parlinmcili. "His Majcst-ys Govern- ment" ilfCfi not sidestep responsi- bility pl writing notes to Wflfihlfl!" tnn. 'I‘l1cy l: 13v hi1 hllfllorly which Washington notes luck. n difference which oihrr nations will understand some day it they do not new. They invite {rm and prompt attention. ‘Ihrrc is little doubt as to which Ls the bclWr wily of doing business.- Torono Glwbe. Two nr three things stand out in any discussion of the Russian st- untfon. One of thcm is the survival of the Soviet authority long past the limit of life allowed it by most of its prophetical critics. Another is the file-t ihni: the early frenzles of sllVlfillFlTi arc tclng gradually drop- pod and more conservative features adopictl. -Aftcr all, no one with any appreciation of what went on in Rursin before the revolution can blame the Russian people for revolt- ing or for being wliing to follow rc~si~ililfillnl'y lenders. Almost any- ill 11- lvas better than the rule of “will; Itnmmlofi‘ and the oold- bfllllllcd intricllcl-s who surrounded lulu. llnvlng 1112.411: n violent change ill iivnr form of government. the Itllivillvs arc gradually finding out that 11 policy somewhere in between is ]l'»'-1'f‘ workable and slowly. but slll-ciy. lilo authorities are edging back '1 fill, ccmpzomiisc position. ghlng 1111.1 gins; 11 .131 n lildy in quil-ements > l 4» meat ti}? ‘but in the citement of tile lastl meeting we forgot to get his ad-l dress. We last saw Henry almost impaled on an iron grill. Two of his friends were trying m lift/him of! without tearing his elothes and Henry, we are sorry to say. was singing "Daisies Won't Tell.” A taxi- cab whirled us out 0t‘ Henry's life. Since then, each Christmas, a card has arrived from Henry. It car- ries beet wishes for the season and at the lower left hand corner the information is conveyed that Henry ls living in New York city. Letters lo that address have been returned by the United States mails with a suggestion that there are many Henry Fords in New York, to say ‘nothing of Detroit-where there ls another. and that they are unable to make delivery of our frenzied appeals for more news. What is Henry doing? He Is apparently out of jail; but what is he doing Has he become a chemist in earnest? Does he still sing "Daisies Wont Tell?" Has he married, and if s0. why? All these and many more questions we fain would know. But Henry will not tell me on his Christmas card, nor will he give me his address. Henry is as good as dead to us. and Ln the silent watch- es of the evening, we mourn the loss. for he was worth knowing. His baritone voice in the lower reaches of "Daisies Won't Tell" was among the most effective things we have ever known. surely everyone has had the same experience. Yet, ycar after year, when the choice of Christmas cards comes up for discussion, no one appears to think oi the simple convenience of adding sh adequate postal address. No one? There are exceptions of’ course. The people whom one wishes never w hear of again never fail to add the address, and their cards arrive. year after year, with the same deadly accuracy as an income tax statement. Their address stares at one from the mantle-piece all through the Christ- mas week, and at last, in despera- tion, one writes to them; end they answer the letter, and life becomes clouded by muses of unwanted tasks. _,. All this. of course. is a minor tn bulation. It is not a. thing to worry about, not even to write a column about. Life is difficult enough with- out piling Pelion on Ossa over Christmas cards. But who can quell that faint. feeling of impotenm when the cards from the few chosen companions roll in, and one known that that will be all for another year? Friends are hard to come by, and are held only by effort, and at this moment we want very much to hear from Henry Ford-not the man who makes motor-cars, but the one who sings "Daisies Won't Tell." China over Manchuria is not the xe- sult of a. sudden intcmpemte act on the part of one of the disput- ants, says the London Times. No doubt the forward movement of the Japanese Army in September of last year, and its subsequent - tfon of territory more than twice the size of France, have actually pro- duced the present crisis; but. funda- mentally the dlfliculty arises from s rivalry of races which, s; events in western Europe also show, is oi all differences the least easy to com- 'll.c quarrel bcLu-ecn Japan and pose. ::. .. profession. A dentist simply pulled ‘ or filled teeth. “Dentistry in the past has been operating upon a hind-end first plan of waiting for destruction to occur. and then through a process of patch work mechanics milking all the hay possible while the sun shines. This has resulted in an un- healthful uneconomic, and unsocial situation and has put dentistry in the position of being considered by the public as a business rather than a profession." The above paragraph 1s from Dr. Joseph K. Kauflmann, a dentist of New York City. Why has dentistry risen to its proper position as a profession? Because it now teaches the public how to preserve the teeth and thus prevent disease, just as the medical profession by teaching hygiene to school children and adults, has lengthened the human life span by many years. Your dentist ‘now advises that you see him twice a year. This nlenns that any little decay, any tartar at the gum margin of the teeth, any root infection may be detected and thus you will not only save your teeth. but your health also. No one can bcgin to estimate the damage to the entire workings of the body from infected teeth, from poor chewing surfaces, and from diseased gums. . This half-yearly or yearly visit to the dentist is thus really health in- surance. Just as there are research work- ers in medicine so are there re- search workers in dentistry. Dental students tn-duy are alive to the great strides being made in their profession, and, these new students, or recruits as Dr. Kanti- man calls them, "will place facts above opinions, truths above fanc- ies, prevention above cure, children above adults, the whole body above only the teeth, and profession above trade." It is not to be wondered nt there- fore that the dentist is nuw rightly called doctor, because a doctor is really one who teaches. The dentist helps to teach people how to live properly. Ill-Fed Communists (Toronto Mall and Empire) Mr. J. S. Woodsworth, the radi- cal member of Parliament from Winnipeg-scene of the Communist revolution oi 1919-15 travelling around Ontario trying t-o stir up trouble among those who have betn hard hit by a world-wide depre55l0n. For years past Mr. Woodsworth has been a chief apologist for soviet Russia in and out oi’ Parliament, and one wonders who is financing his campaign. No man can travel around the country week after week by rail and motor without having solne means at his disposal. He may be well off in the goods of this world, but if so why does he not distribute his wealth among his fellow Socialists? 0r is he like the Irishman who had two pigs? The Brandon Sun, published not far from the scene or Mr. Woods- wortlvs home and major activities, strongly condemns the Labor M. P. and present leader of the C. C. F. for making unsupported state- ments regarding the condition of workers in the Riding Mountain Government, Park. There ls an ap- parent lack of accuracy in his al- legations that the unempoyed maintained at, the park were or are ill~fed and badly used. The Bran- don Bun doe, a. further service by quoting m‘. J. A. McLaughlin, a Vancouver engineer of high stand- ing, in criticism of Mr. Woods- wortifs spiritual home. Mr. Mc- McLaughlin," after spending two years on a Government contract in Russia, says that 90 per cent. of the Russian workers would leave for Canada if they were free to do so and had the passage money. "Everywhere 1s evidence of fear. You seldom hear a person laugh. If the Soviet fed its own people properly it could not expmt a bushel of wheat." The land of the Soviets is cer- Wllli’ not a workers‘ paradise, for when Mr. McLaughlin showed some of the Russian workers the bill of fare in a Canadian relief camp they thought it was simply capi- talistic propaganda. Mr. Woods. worth may bc sincere, but, if yo, 11¢ 18 ill-informed and, what is worse. he is constantly curried away by his own unfortunate facility for‘ lllib talk. Lenin’s Tomb, Moscow (r. YeatsBrown, m the Bmtewr) Topic's tomb, glut in Dllimlnt. but poor in detail. seemed in me an epitome of my Russian impressions. mom the Red Bquue, especially at night, when the mausoleum of iule greatest materialist of modern times stands foursqulre, gleaming, .monolithfc against the Kremlin walls, and high end far above it the Red Flag flutters floodiighted. ’ one gains an impression of strength and unity of purpose. But inside, the lighting effects are those o! l cabaret, and the mummy that meet; the visitor at the end o! his pil- grimage, with email waxy folded hands, and the flag of the Paris Commune at its feet, seems some- thing of an anti-climax. On the occasion of my visit I was surprised to see that the com- rade in front of me kept on his l cap. A policeman spoke to him roughly, telling him to' take it off. The comrach; obeyed, but winked at me. Lenin was a great figure, though an evil force in the world. He shook the earth more profoundly than Temeriune or Gbengls Khan, and founded his power on n terror hitherto unparallelled, but he was good and kind in private life. Now his yellow face, with its magnifi- cently moulded forehead, thin red beard, sardonic smile, and wart by the right eye, is a peepshow for the people he loved. Lights For “Orators (Ottawa Journal) Among reports made to the recent convention of the American Federa- tion of Labor, one was unique. Pzcsented by the Federation's two fraternal delegates to the. British Trades Union Congress at New- castle-on-Tytle, ‘last September, it told how the British choke off orat- ors. Thus: "speakers ale not allowed to talk from the floor, but are re- quired. to HD1395! before the Con- gress on a small raised platform FLIGHT Over the landscape sered and dap- pled brown, Changing from scattered farm to , scattered town. Piercing and restless, yellow eyes look down, As wild geese fly. 1 Panoply of scattered surface strange, ~ In silent movement, virile, strong, they change . Their leadership, above the twilight range, Against the sky. Through ghost-like, leafless skele- tons of trees, There steals unto my eyes upon the breeze, The vision oi their trek from far-of! seas, ’l‘i1roughout the night. ' ‘The haunting call of passage, sounding clear, which strays from domes of silence to my ear. Awakes my soul to wish to Join them there. In deathless flight, - —'de Hauteviile. Charlottetown. ’ Ideas For Christmas Gifts FOR .HIM Military Brushes ivory Shaving Sets lardleyh Shaving Set Coty’: Shaving Set Potter a Moore Shaving Set Film Lighten Cigarette: Tobacco: FOR HER Toiletwnre in beautiful Gift Sets Jfnnicure Sets Yardleyfil Toilet Sets Ashes oi Roses Toilet Sets ilonbigant Toilet Sets Coty's Toilet Sets Evening in Paris Toilet Sets Gay Puree Toilet Sets Vanity Cases, Perfume, Atomlzers, Dusting Powder, Bath Salts, etc. A fiflmlllete assortment o! Moll-s XXX Chocolates in “Fancy Gift Packages, also In Con» Chests. Drop in and see our display of GIFT SUGGESTIONS THE 2 MACS his eloquence, and exceeded another ii JOE $AY$--i Come not to the Counsel uncalled. _ An inexpensive Giffwhich will PLEASE Those who have not already sent us their list kindly mention their own expiry date. This will prevent any delay in pre- Pdring our Christmas mailing list. The Charlottetown Guardian PHONE132 which 100KB like n, pulpit, Whgn the chairman wishes to notify a speaker that his time is up, he pushes a button and a little red light appears in the box where the speaker is standing. Then, if he does not stop within the ap- pointed time (one minute) the chairman presses another button which r1118! a bell. If he does hot MOD then, the assemblage in various effective ways brings him to realization that hi; time is up," seeded, it might be endless. admirable as this arrangement is, it is not. entirely original. As long ago as before the wal- the Hungar- 1 fan Parliament had a similar sys- tem, and one really more effective. Under the Hungarian device, the appearance of a. green light told a deputy mat he had a minute to go. If s; the end of the minute he was still going. he was warned by o. red light. Then, if he persisted in nail. high-class ‘cello playing. minute. he simply disappeared from the chamber through a. trap door. Although the preference of many an‘ was Dr‘ gnu‘? R Amsmm DECIZMBER 21, m, ‘W ,,..->;-..,," 43$, ,...ol,..,,- l , . 1/4; - _.. s15 l would be for the Hungarian plan’. beginning over here might be m with the British system. It w} be tried, as an experiment, it” next big banquet. Then, if it in extended . political and fraternal gtllheti to our various legislatures, and er toéome pulpits. The possibilities .1 the thing-if it worked-wool“ $500 FOR LOSS OF FINGER Nrtll. LONDON, Dec. 20. —— (C.P.1 _l ‘cello player was awarded $500 clam. ages in the Civil Court ntLeedl Assizes against a doctor in connec- tion with an operation on a finge} It was stated that the op- eraiion had resulted in the loss oi the delicate touch necessary. fol Tho plaintiff was Sydney Barker. luusic- fan, of Dewsbury, and the defend- ‘We Are Sure will Delight You In Our Showing of CHRISTMAS GIFTS An exceptional display of Perfumes, Toilet Waters, l-‘ncu Powders and Compacts in Combination Sets and singly. Christmas Chocolates in the leading makes beautifully boxed for the holiday trade-Smokers Goods in Pipes. T ‘ . Cilllrs, l‘ , T “ i‘ ‘ Cigarette and Cigar Cases, Smoke 5 Sets, etc. Parisian Ivory Toilet and Manicure Sets. Boudoir Lamps, Bnlshes, Combs, Mir- rolrl, Photo Frames, Perfume Bottles, Trays, etc., in various co on. Other articles include, Watennans Fountain Pens and Pencils, Walking Sticks, Thermos Bottles and Lunch Kits. Cameras, Ladies and Gents Travelling Sets and Cases, lloi Water Bottles, Rolls, Gilette and Auto Strep Safety Razors. Shavers Sets, Playing Cards, etc. . We want you to look over on: offerings. Now is the time to make your selections.» E. A. Fosme- CENTB-AL DBUGSTOB-l HEADQUARTERS FOB CHRISTMAS GIFTS HICKEYMIICIIOLSOIVS BLACK TWIST FGDIZAQQG?) i 1U Greet George 8t. v There Are -Many New Things" 1.. l-li‘ t‘, i l ‘i5. 1' I ‘l ll 11