l fl _A v . .l‘ I c '_-safer.; 2 ll. _ll ».' fill _ l ; \ ~vlv ' <1" .@‘ Ze. _ T _`.`,1 _ 4 ii ir ll \ . l‘.1 L l l _ \ _l » l '=~`..-__ -,-..._ _ 31. .a< l i For Consignment Through the f D ._»v-_.._...- in l ..l l *-*Qi = il fzilf .¢. wl L... .........-` .' _ »_¢» i gllfi ,I."1 fl KLL. I Canadian National Silver ' ,__ sammy ony- ` Leave charlouewwn - - - - - - sm /i.M. no mn, l -..@.=,....¢.u_-..,...i_.f..-... .,_._.»_».»_ .._..;..»._.-.:._.;,~.,_f __ - . - .¢i......Lem.1-.»-.-....--_- .. V \ WEDNESDAY 'run UnA.ru.u'1'r1s'ruwN Gumwuuv u1<.L.:slv1ul-.R 23 1 v--* ° ‘ 3 f I V1 I ` 9 " ' TTT. ` " ' ‘ -? """.'.T..=_»..=~ Gillette Blade Gift Package -sirey lBlu= Gillme blades U0 mlllvnlunl packages of 5'l) in a beautiful Christmas wrapping. A grand present that means mouths of shaving comfort for any man. Prius $2.50. OU can’t go wrong when you select one Yoi' these handsome and practical men's gifts by Gillette. Each is attractively pack- l aged--and each contains months of real shaving comfort for husband, sweetheart, 3 dad or brother. See these fine, yet inexpen- sive gifts at your dea1er’s Now! Cdllldill Gift Plcllags-Contains a handsome gold-plated _ Gillette Razor and blade container ins sturdy metal use, covered with a beautiful leather grain material. Also 35 Blue Gillette blades. A gift any msn will appreciate. Prltl SIJU. GILLETTE SAFETY RAZOR C0. OF CANADA, LTD. g_:____,_____. ,_.~___ ___ __ . , W-- llfliilliitllfi li. EXCURSIONS lla ' TO BOSTO VIA SAINT JOHN, N. B., AND YARMOUTH, N. 5., ON THE BIG, COMFORTABLE S. S. YARMOUTH CELEllR_-\Tl-I flu- holidays midst the gay whirl of the melropolis. Tickets good leaving Faint John Friday, December 18, 1936, and Friliary. I)¢-vcrnlwr 23. 1936. Ticltetslgood returning up in nnrl inrllliiingljnnunry 6, 1937. (Loral |m.=.v-r|;,u-r.< are not carried between Saint Iohn and Yarmouth.) llcund-trip Coach excursion, fare Cl~lAl-RLOTTETOWN to BOSTON $19.00 SUMMERSIDE to BOSTON 19.00 (Farm for fired-rlnss rail irnm-I are slightly higher.) I-Iqirslly lnw fares from nlhrr points in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. . . . Regular nnc~wuy fare, Suinrjohn to Boston, S10. Train cnnnr-rls nt Saint John, from l\ll..P0ll\!A.il3..NF\`f!.n§HPIlYiSk.HHl|, Primer, Efiwnrvi Islnnri. R_|_-gulnr -:filings in Boston, via Yarmouth, Fridays at B A. M. (A. T.) from Rccrl’s l’oint Wharf; dun Ilnston 8 A. M. (E. T.) next day. Re- turning, lcavo linston Wednesdays at 5 P. M. (E. T.)| due Saint John next afternoon. V Passengers lmivlins rhrnusli rlrkns lo Ronan and beyond any occupy slslsrlonss Ilmnlq nlghls, u-hiio ship ia lying in Sain! loin, ssllholl lttrl tltlvjo. nnssunn LIN!! _‘1-"F- Apply at any Cnnmiion National Railways Company * ‘ ' -if Buying Fertilizer ‘ » O Now Less Arduous l The selling season for fertilizers is approaching again, und farmers , will bc culled upon to choose from ,the list of the salesmen. Choos- ‘ ing fertilizer according to soil and crop reqwrcmcnts is less difficult than il. used to be before the pro- vinc’al fertilizer councils were ,establish-ed. Most of the provinces have set up these Councils in re- ent years primarily for the pur- ose of making fertillzfr rec- <:/mmendatlons, after studying all .vailable expcrimental data. These recommendations may be dbtained free and if followed properly will *ive satisfaction. Although these ferii'ib;ra?ounc`ls :re a comparatively ne urce of .nformation for farmers, lt is a “gnlficant fact. that largely due to hcir_recommef\r¢‘d zrnne r»-uit. sprinkle wlln snlt nnll set in n cold plnco. Wppn \”“fHl.V in s¢r\'&‘. cover with muy- nnnulso :ln-aging, mlxlng nu wen w_ :ti-llicr just bcfurc scrvlng. for l"“°‘ °'°"‘ A Buy Plenty of these Juzcy ORANGES and GRAPEFRUIT. R I ST M A S Christmas is the time when you like to have plenty of good oranges. And right now they are at their best. Let the kiddies eat all the oranges they want-there's nothing better for them. To be sure of the best, look for TROUT HALL Oranges and Grapefruit. Each one is Wax Texed to keep them lusciously fresh, as they come from the tree. You can't beat them for juiciness-and they make delici- ous fruit dishes. Insist on TROUT HALL for Christ.- m8S. 13%,. ,Wifi LQ U” 0 E S »Gra|::iruit EMPlRE GROWN FRUIT FROM SUNNY JAMA1(jA mg' ‘-\“n£_‘~Q»@g, ,\_»"'~g|p'-his, e *_ . sl- _ __< . ~ __..__`_- , llle. 'luere is ncmung to sat@y the spirit within which longs for "magic I easements opening on the foam ul. perilous seas in faery lands forum". And so he bums sometimes to wild exccsscs-io drugs and drink-and secs even in war a. way of escape fiom the prison of his unspeakable boredom. ‘ And leisure has nothing more to offer us unless ir. be wisely and profitably employed. We see every- where today me dempra. izing effect ol unemployment. upon those who have no inner spiritual resources upon which to draw. Liabour with- out any joy in it may test- the spirit of the strongest man, but lt. cannot break his heart like the feel_- ing that he is unwanted-than no place of useful service is open for him in the bustling human activity of thc whole wide world. Here is the greatest problem con- fronting our age-to give to every man in the world his fair sha.re of root. crops and roses-of bread and wine-of all the prose and poetry of life. All our processes of produc- tion, distribution and exchange have been so twisted and warped by the sudden and cataclysmic changes that have come in recent years that they cannot function. But surely it is not too much bo expect that in a society, actuated by good-will, some system will be evolved by the wit I-nd wisdom of mankind to distribute our abound- ing wealth more equl.l.o.bly among all the children of men. In the meantime. and indeed at all times. we may make our choice not to be absorbed exclusively in the cultivation of root CNN. im' portant as that must. be. but to train roses of all kinds around our house of life. We may determine, as ma- Canadian poet Archibald ump- msn exhortez "Not to be conquered by those headlong days But to stand free; to hold the mind at brood _ On life‘s deep meaning, Nsturds altitude _ Of loveliness and time‘s mysterious ways." V _ if giiéss We are compsssed about by crass materialism and we need cultivate. as I. corrective, what llam Watson called in his poem "the things that cellent." We may well bonds goods, wuu walked t.B'é streets of _London half naked and cold and hungry but who walked also with his head among the sims. It was he who taught that the character of our lives and our in- ward happmess and peace are de- termined by our own deliberate choice. “The angels keep their ancient places Tum but s. stone, and start. a wingl ’Tis ye, 'tis your estranged faces Thar. miss the many-splendoured thing." - How frequently men in high plac- es who have acquired wealth miss the road to the highest and best which is found by those who wak in humb er weys. Hon. Mnrt.n Hur- rell, the distinguished Librarian of Parliament at Ottawa, has wnrteu a charming volume of essays for the title of which he has borrowed a fellciious phrase of Francis Thompson. He reminds us that the poet “sick in mind and body, dcstl- ture and solitary" could yet wall: the crowded ,streets of Londcn be- lieving that for the saddest souls there “Shall shine the traffic of Ja.cob's ladder Pitched betwlxt Heaven and Char- ‘ ing Cross." One of Mr. Burrelks chapters deals with Lord Besverbrook and his attitude to life as set. forth in some of his books, notably one on "Success" written especially for young people. The noble Lord seems to regard money-making as the be- s.ll and end-all of human existence. This grossly materialistic spirit is expressed in his reference to shel- ley as a msn of genius-but one "who would not have been a success on Wa.l Street though the poet showed a flesh of business knowl- edge in refusing to lend money to B7r°n"; as to which Mr. Burrell makes the ca.u.stio comment that "URN IIB. of course' people so foolishly constituted that they would rather have written 'To a %llll'l¢" Of "Adonnls" than to have made a success ln_Wal1 Street.” Lord Beaverbrook ls quoted as IIYIDB. "The real education is the market pisos of the street. There “W BWUY of chsncter enables the lxuly proficiency in estimating the value of the currency of the realm." To which Mr. Burrell adds. “And if all of us were thoroughly Sn. ll..-d with these hlah ideals what . pleasant, damnable sort i.: U . this world would bel" Over against this glorific.....» rr of crude seflsbness as the supreme law of life we have set the high idealism of R. W. Emerson, whose words make their appeal to all that is best in human nature. “Every man takes care that me neighbour shall not cheat, him. But a day comes when he begins to care fha. he do not cheat his neighbour. Then all goes welt He has changed his market, cart. into a charlot of the .sum And this high idealism is just the mango of the Christiul gospel which seeks always to give us a true perspective od life. Our Lord cnl cd Himself the hrtld 01 life, but He was called also tho rose of Sharon and tht He embodied it in thu -lhe bresd He taught their right re the Kingdom of sured that all things would be add Paul had the some sane the world around him. Hs It need of a material foundation Io! life. If a man would not work nei- ther should he eat. But Rui tn- sisted that the spiritual life 'wal all-important. and must. be carefully cultivated. “Finally my brethren," he said in his let-ter to his be'oved Phillpplan friends, “whatsoever things are true, honest, pure, lovely and of good report, think on these things-and the God of peace sha‘1 be with you." He knew that root crops are necessary-that a man should be "not slothful in business' -but he knew equally well that roses must be given their place- and this was the point of his great- est emphasis-that the well-rounded life _must be "fervent in Qlrlt sar- vlng the Lord." JUDGMENT UPHILD 0 rg £3 ,;i§§§§§§ §§il§s.§§§i "I am nfraid our new housemsid is dishonest." said the wife. "Come, my dear," answered the husband. “You should never judge by appearances." `/ _ -‘;__;;.‘ 5 Judge Gives Hollywood Actor Six Cents Damages NEW YORK, Dec. 22-. Geor e McManus R' if" '=-es.=~ .;-- Q '. ~ 1-Alcan'-E-3 ‘ I _ illllll5 4-2 ‘-14.14 iii N _(L_ 8 _ V5-.»-f ¥ . J ‘jg _ ~/J( ... -'-_ .. s‘=.-%*- i § FEP!-E 1*- ‘NOLLDBRAQ HOWWELLFE LXKEDWAHIS ‘ Tl-E STEVE CAME. ; _ L . if illiif |l\_g} _ CLOTHES TIL-I- N _J :N1-is not-rr worn _ ~ ~_ - f°g,-;- encrmazcamsi-aoula . ,___§._ A wrru cnmeuere - -_ e » .- f- -- t~aNo‘i.n°s=\-ri=nowl 'if' ‘ic reno-row-use-. _ I ~»-%-."'---°----|,:*'- _ t `/_' ,<:`§-~;. :gy _ . 5;,"-' \A. -~.¢_.-. ...W .......» ’ `_'“` ' *“"‘“.'-~" O " _ _.113 ._,_ _ 1~‘:-:fsll'.:_._ .Tmmsmm__m_ , _