..._.-_..-.-- m-—ui»4nr~|n_ PAG l1‘ FUU K ‘inc ilitarlctfetnwn Guardian iit LlYUL-(lll \\. (‘hula u. llrLurn M. llurnrfl. lni-l. . lfurnrtl. F- J. I Pre-i t ,,..|*r|\i\|rl|l .1. tillnn- Aliil Uiiiagllig liirw-tur J. It. \m|-'-il1\ l-llll \u| |~ A lluvhlunon D. . . ».\._.--»=li-Y a...“ irnn. nan." ulul l). i. Currie I llillllili-nl I881) ‘hiiflilig $5M! p» ,.-lr m. ‘I mi [Hf your 5.1.00 |..r _\i-ir I sllillf, DECEMBER 23, l9 37. i‘..iiii....i Tribirlalions . he iloing a lot of iiit ovcr Christmas lt will be re- two _vi:irs ago he said i - tional i his , ‘nail tried to llc now finds particularly flattering. iThe oldest of the do- minions, he said, had "scarcely any motive of self-interest to connect her with the Mother Country." Yet none had played a nobler part when the call came for assistance. "Her loyalty and devotion to the Throne was a remarkable thing." In South Africa the world has the spec- tacle of a former enemy who bad not only for- gotten the once bitter feud, but “the relations with South Africa are happier than at any time in the past.” They were not British sol- diers, but their own brothers and cousins, who put dow-n the attempt in i914 by a section of Dutclibred South Africans to achieve indepen- dence. Even the Irish Free State, he consider- ed, would in time come in on the same terms as other dominions as an enthusiastic partner oi the Empire 0n the basis of free association. I s-vii‘.e uiih its to cxp~irt til Szates and v ‘liztzirio river , .< tn Cianadzfs l - xvits fiirc- lfliitziriil. - the state- l ‘Quebec that his , ete control of l all if; _ - ' _ "itcr Aberltart 0f Allyn-m ‘vi e‘ ’ l-"edr v" risdiction over rbr- ' ~ inc f1 endorse Pre- t rrriviso that l pockets". 5 ll Qutario f re a semblance 1 vild without be- J liC ha: been to ..is, lluf to men- i (ifllflillllllilfl Labors Provinces have lllllxslOll bu: al- r, evidence is be- ..zini~tsioncrs “like a (jliaris, statistics, -ral tracts, and the record. Tihe lil is overwhelm- z-ccinomics could ~'ll1l_\‘ out iii one lustic Rciwell <-ii Vic ~v~pc of the evi- Ii iiitrt on the ivitnesses. pI‘. r’. g: l" 1.15/4’? a» l ~ ,. t to the people -r Siwvll provinces are .'.'i, n11 iiic ~lflllil. the re- ‘"'\Q'.1:jiZl('1ll.'l and he- ' _ human brain.” zictuaily- he xvorks i-don, rather than til exactly. Before i ~ 'iii\'l()ll§l_\' will tila vcar book, irililv: rine good '1 -~ more good i‘!lllll~<l(lll. after hes but of llllll_\' as 2m)’ ,1"fi'i'.'1._j "w. Tim - - i piiiir very ‘g " _. lli"'lll4, rcnicm- b’? ' ‘ .. ‘. u it the value. 5-4‘ i . part1." t~i a mcre l PX l ‘ " ._ 1;, with each 871' i li zl iiii \t'llilt">l out. "'—i - zi- lilj.‘ shill "if ' iirl; i-f litv ha I- f, _, ' ’»—-'i l "c7 rt-ininhraitce l Jll "will. .--;i.rl_v ~L'\'('l'1ll i‘ iin- ‘l . .. lwnh , iii“ - ’ ' ' ' ' " ' turmoil and L ~' 'l"liiiu f s W iw- ivzivs. ' '—' - i ' ‘i ~ iiii-ir and ii L"‘-‘.- as uiiv _‘ liii ' iviillfs Ztllfl .1 liwiiilirv >0- Kliiripii-ss of t l)0- i, .\';il<: iygariling lini- i-iiiv, he rc- .‘-liiilu~i' Loun- \ lxillillilli hut the Iii- iiptiositc di- fwl the Ill!- ‘ l rziuiiitis." llc "i ~i \\I\lZlilll~l('I', which ~ ~ll‘llC'lll‘f! for soli- - llininviiiiuwiltli,_hc- ..i il fiir it. anil in some ‘ . 2i ti hi iiiri- they wattl- ir \-_ ' ' _\ ivihiril tilillliltll that t-i i. -l l; ~tiii'_i., i~"ilc~til1- lri-iil npi-ii "Ullilfl" gnu; 1-, ~ ' i! iYl. and iii-t viii fiircc or fvlilifli -' " ' I” '..ii'i'.lliii'_'l_v severe" .~'lfflill$ l0 i- 'i.f. " 5 n iw- h‘.- lli‘lll ~lll>jl'l_‘ll"l might ivi-ll in. 7-i Kin izp any cinpirt- iiiiiulilcil OII the iiiil "I-‘Ulvill. lint tliiitigli the link which bitiils iili‘ iiirllhlllflllx‘ In lllf‘ (froivn is “so slender that it ri-ui-l liv lll'lll\'l‘ll tiilllrirruw." it is “so stynng" that ii will endure for hundreds of years. Iliuruing to Lliiiada, Lgrd lgLartingttin w.» I Z v . m... ,. q imnther of left by the eccentric will of Charles‘ l French names as well as bits of greenery. Here l‘ Editorial Notes "Han-tint" cabs, the popular predecessors 0i the auto, were patented this date, i834. in t it it The Quints are not in it with the ltappy Toronto children who inherits the \'ance _\lillar, which the Supreme Court has 1 just held t0'be perfectly valid. i Q i X ’Tis an ill-wind blows nobody any good. \\'orld rearrnament, causing a scramble for iron ore, has brought prosperity t0 at least one company and a handsome Christmas bonus to its miners. The Swedish Ore Company in Lapland-owned hali by the State-shows a record profit "of 48.- 000000 kronor, against 20,000,000 last year and deficits in three preceding years, Accordingly. the company decided to distribute 1,100,000 kro- nor among its miners, representing a month’s pay for each, which tends to make a Merry Christ- mas for some 800 families. i X i Uriale Butler,-of Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, the Negro strike leader, who told the Negro Work- ers of that tropical colony that “he would shed blood" to gain his ends, defied the authority of the King, and ridiculed the law courts, has been convicted of sedition after a trial lasting twelve days, and faces a penalty of two years hard labor. But excitement still rages in the oil and petroleum island, and it will take firm admin- l I'll‘. UHAKLU ['1 l‘. iionzs av riiE WAY 1n a field near Mlalu, Poland, 200 storks held court and eondetncxed one of their number to death. Peas- ants who witnessed the trial say the "a0cuaed” was a white bird while all the others bore the normal black- tlpped plumage. Within a minute after the sentence was pasad the whte stork was peeked to death." l-fow deliciously humanl-Tclegraph Journal. . The British motor industry has gained the upper hand 1n the Em- pire markets. A few years ago 1t seemed that ft would be impossible to flght American competition in Empire countries, and lt was con- sidered the best thing to try to compromise with American man- ufacturers. But British banks bc- ltevde ln the strength and vuwlue of the motor car industry, eventually the Government yield ed and agreed to back up motor manufacturing a: home by helpfu‘ duties. Since then the British motor industry has grown almost out. of bounds. Reduction in horsepower taxation proved. a source of incentive, and the types devolped ln Britain are more economical than those of any cotmtry-Jfbtchange. Italy has withdrawn from the league of Nations, doubtless fear- ‘ng. as in the plratq subnia..nc b less 0f September. that the a. s lve and war-loving democ- racies might precipitate that paci- fist dictatorship into a war not of lLs own making -I-lam1lt0n Spectator. Certain external practices of Fascism have been introduced into at. least. one school of the School Commission of Montreal. to the knowledge 0f two commissioners and of the clty inspector. The Fascist. salute and goose-step marching are taught to the pupils of a school in MIilSOIIDPIlXt’. The pupils gave a demonstration ul them recently on the occasion of istration on the part of the government before l the effects of Butler's seditious agitation are wip- ‘i ed out, and peace and hartnony restored to one i of the most delightful of \Vest Indian Islands, i visited regularly by so many Canadian tourists. i U I ‘ .-\ correspondent writing frotn Toronto waxes enthusiastic over the recent speech of Hon. C. l A, Dunning at the Empire Club there. She says those present were delighted with it, and con-I sider .\Ir. Dunning “our only patriotic states-l man at the present time”. Which makes us re- I call what .\lacaulay said are the requisites of ' a successful popular speaker. Sudden bursts which seem to be the effect of inspiration. Short sentences which come like lightning, burn- ing, dazzling, striking down everything before them. Sentences which spoken at critical mo- merits decide the fate of great questions —which at once become proverbs. These are the re- quisitcs, and who shall say Mr. Dunning has not developed them to the full? is i 1F i! If Mr. llore-Belisha, the British Minister for \\'ar, has never married it is that “my cooking requirements are so exacting that l have never been able to find a wife who comes up to the necessary standard". At anv rate. that is what he told army cooks to whom he presented medals at an exhibition of the Cooking School at Alder- shot camp the other day. Since the \\'orld War bully beef has been banished from Thomas .~\tkin.~'s bill of fare and he gets a dinner that not only is very palatable but adorned with is a sample menu as published: Green Pea Soup Filer de Bocuf a la Pompadour l-Istiagnol Satice Pininncs dc Terre a la DllCllP>~C y Hench-Canadian Hort-over, it appears. lie gets no fewer than iiiiy kinds of puddings. i‘ >F lb >'fl .\ -ii-f:ir unidentified and uiicapiuretl fol)- hci- llllil made careful {iri-parations for his c-capt- ziitt-r he had taken the $1.500 payroll frriiii the messenger 0f the .\luitiinum l‘lant and Yes-cl Crimp:u1_v of \\'and.-'\viirth, linglanil. The escape ivzis to lie effected li_v a iuaitnctl ‘aiitocar parked with titigiiic running, 'l'hi.- ines- i .~(‘llf_’t’l‘. jantes Lcoitard Nichols, :15‘. did nut know this, but after being robbed ai the company's gates. he contrived t-i beat the robber to the ivziiting car. so that tiic robber was obliged to trust to his legs to escape. Later .\lr. Nichols said tri the police: "I saw a waiting car. jump , cd on the running hoard. and told the driver to chase the thief. The driver drove the car into a wall, but just as it struck I dropped off, an-l continued the chase on foot." The robber Ila-lied into Wandsivortli Park, but being out- footcd throw the bag containing the payroll into the bushes, where it was recovered. When Mr. Nichols returned to the gates the car had dis- appeared. n a a it Messrs Ilcphurn, Duplcssis and Aberhart arc finding encouragement from ex-Ilrcsitlent lloovt-r in their criticism of the laissez-faire policies of Prime Minister King. At Chicago the other night he spoke on "Economic Security and the Present Situation". His ideal system, as lic- visualized it, would be one of “intellectual and spiritual liberty” in which the machine ivas driven, but not thit man; in which business was regulated, but not subjected to dictation; in which there was cooperation and self-discipline mitsidc of government, and poverty and fear were eliminator]. This isnn philosophy 0i laissez- iaire or rlog-cat-rliig." lll" said. "It is a philos- ophy iii free nien with the responsibilities 0i frccdniit. lt requires no tampering with the Cnnstitutioit or the independence of the judici- ary. It is a syzstciti of faith in the competence, the self-discipline and the moral stamina of the American people and the divine inspiration of free men. It is a system of forward movement iii i-~r greater attainment. Our transcendent i 5 not. afford. The BllL-ll i ' lng its cltlzens. or by borrowing from them and borrowed motley, "iis moment in America is a change in rrl this system.” the presentation of a "French- Canadlan national flag." blue, with fleur-de-lys in the corners and a white cross in the middle Th8 flag is hung up in the recrea- tion room of the school. Every time U19)’ p855. and every evening. before leaving school, the pupils. give the Fascist salute before thci H82 . “'1; are told that this habit is spread» lng and that. it. Ls practised in sev- i eral other schools 0f the riistrit-Ll It should be well itoted that we do not. see 1n these things a sign; of Fascist infiltration and we do not dream of lrnputing to the, School Commision a crime whlchl does not exist, but we wonder it ‘ the generalization of this practice. woufd not end by giving to it a signification which it does not pos- sass-La Canada (Montreali. Bernard Shaw insists that the British lion 1n" 1914 was not a sleeping l10n but a crouching lion playing dead. When simple-mind- ed Germany had been inanoouired Just where England ivantr-d llPT. the crouching llon leaped. The tact that the crouching lion nearly leaped hunself into defeat and im- Peflal collapse naturally does not bother a fairiy self-confident thinker like Bernard Shaw. Still. there Ls his theory for all it ls worth. It. has a certain timeliness from the colloquy reported by Mr. Blrcball from Brussels. Oll‘: of our American difegaies asked a BritLslt 6011685116 Whether there real!’ ivas B lion at the end o! the tail that everybody ls so busy twistiuz. The best comeback the Ellgllzll delegate could manage was to ask iv2tc:lici' the" "BUY ls an ergle who owns the tall feathers which people are 5° W53’ pulling out. It was onfy a longer way or saying, "on. yfllll " —New York Times. A contemporary records: "sztringl and - tcdai‘ 1 I l '\V N DUAKU-Al‘ a llibat Buoy of bums Qbnllcillb.‘ y MAN WAS DIEANT TO MIXED DIET EAT A One of the interesting exhibits a: the Chicago Century of Progress f was that which showed the length l cf the intestines 1n a sheep, n. man, l and a dog. 1n the case cf the sheep l the intestines were 24 times the i length of 1w body. in a. dog they were 4 l~2 times the length of lta body. and in mun 9 1-2 times the lctigtli cf lii.s body isitting.) Now why does an animal like the sheep have to have such a lcng intestine in proportion to m height? A eheep lives on grass and herbs, a bulky fcod with low heat or fuel value and therefore must est a great am: unt of grm to get enough nourishment for the needs of its body. 'I'hi.s means that, 1t must have a long intestine s0 that this low fcod value grass will not pass out of its intestine until the 1n- zctine has absorbed all its food value frcm it. If the intestine were “iiort the grass would pass through 1n tco short atinte to give the lslieepls body all the nourishment r. it. In the ease of the dog however the intestine ls short because the dog rats meat-a concentrated feed. The meat ls put into such .(‘O!'lfl1'.lOl'1 by the stomach (partly digested) that when 1t reaches the intestine the intestine quickly air rbs this rlcb concentrated i c y digested food Into the blood. Tltilc is thus in the dog no need 10:‘ a long intestine t0 absorb the . food. i What about man? , p Research workers point. out that in proportion to the length 01m; bzcly‘ (sitting), the intestine ls about one-third the length o1 that of the sheep and about twice u long as that of the dog. This means ilten that man (in proportion to his height» should not eat as much meat as the clog, or eat. as much ‘Jr-ass ivecetables and frulti as the sheep. In other words man was meant- to live on lhe mixed diet-meat, geest. fish. cereals, vegetables and lflll , . _A.s meat 1s used to fepglf won t" ue caused by work or exercise. office workers need only about half as much meat. as those engaged ln hard physical work, or t-wo 1n- dulge in vigorous exercise. A CHRISTMAS MEMORY Come, friend, recall with me that stirring dream Vfhlcli clothed itself 1n flesh one night betteahh A stable-roof while cattle drew soft. breailt And stars derhcad unearthly bright did gleam. Shrphcrds and shelks forsook their haunts to gaze Thzrcon.-—a sght to set the mind ablaze! It moved the lowly and the great. to inter ways! l can"! "all! fnr winter nmva- T ; days ls a pretty czmnfes: prouss, What, with cliaziilizz to mun-r grease. Ebtzing in solution. and s": forth. " lt was simpler.“ s2 reader from I . scalded out the i started i-p the bu. rnd we were all set Siar "it bz- ‘l-r -Kti!i.sa.s City If this qut-virm (if the Ct-rtvna colonies: Ls t) ba raised i~ i-ii at a suitable momui‘ ~ present ln crratiornl FIVFH Ls "EFF ready to b: on good ' with Gfflllilll)‘, and is “,1; ~- dl-tcuis in a ffiotirlfy w 1v grievances that hintlrr good 110m. But in illln mrlwr -.~' onies 1t w:u'd not be uisr " able to expect two prc-limzini ' (‘Pli- dltlons to be fulfiled -l rst a precise statement of what ivoultl i satisfy the grievance; and next, an l assurance that. , reached would rcsttll in a Qclllllll" any settlement appeasement and would not bri in advance base for furtlirir cinlnis Abpflrenlly. much is, i0 be asked o! this country. The least that ("Ylllfl be required 1n return would be a real and assured contribution to the guarantees of the world's peace. Surely the nation and the statesman whose motto is peace would be the first to ondorc that condition. -Dally Telegraph and‘ 1 Morning Post. London . In the first. place, it luslon to bellevc there ext-ts tn Washington a source of funds into I which the States can (lip without; cost. to themselves. There ls no magic ln the formula of “Feder- ally financed" roads or other pub- llc works. The Government 1n‘ Washington ha: not tapped some mysterious source of credit, nr drawn money from thv air. It. has no spending pOWOI‘ cept that which lt acquires by tax- must be repaid with lni€TESb.-—NCW York Times. What‘: the sense of talking of u slight bogging down of buslnes: as . a threat of another depression such ll that of 1929? Even in the United Btltel, where there has Ihe non-freeze ‘ . i ‘ii! iivff-AIKKK . .\ i l5 an l.- wliatcvr-r cx- ‘ zx'00:!~e~<utez-czz-e-z-cz-eiceztcie-ez-e-ez-cz-eea:z e —J. W. A. Nicholson \ Beale-title Manse, P. E. I. . Ycai-Eud, 1937. l l sisrenuz mio HAXVPFORD, Conn. —(CP)—- tiapcrs don't gall the ages ff -. Catharine and Nellie Quinn, rs. but two of them have - “iiii cieatcst slump, the na- ‘ 10 is 68 billions as a- ‘. ln 1932, with a er Willi decrease lti unemploy- .P~= lmists. we sometimes - are rs much of a nuisance llélfi. -0ttawn Journal. l? SEE OUR Christmas Display Before Shopping Elsewhere WE WILL t I l by OUR Stirprise YOU Attractive Prices . I z . THE two iiiiics lglllIl PUBLIC FORUM i f“; “h-g [e opal III ll: dlnnllol u wv-Wllflm L qlfillln ll Inland!» I‘ Charlottetown Caulk: Inn III annually undone Ill Olllm" u unun-Ifllll ' AN’ OLD MINISTS GREETINGS 1o ms consumes-non- CALEDONIA Slrr-Plndh! it imposilbll w wrlteall my old count-elm“ 1n- diirldually much as ml‘ he!" 15 yearning for 1t, l crave the mdulg- ence of myfrlend your esteemed Ealtor to afford rne u little space in the columns of your valuable DEW? to convey the love of my heart to my late loyal eongregat on of Cale- donll; and to n)’. may God Brant to one and all of you a. blessed Christmas season and a happy New Year for many $91" w C0319; may you be blessed. 1n body- Wll "I'd circumstances. In the words of Scripture let me say: Beloved I prgy above all things that. you may prosper and be 1n health even as your soul prusperet-h- I $119" W" those who have passed on since. but, hopefully rejolclngly. because we believe they have ruched the hIPPY ' shore and shall dwell 1n the House of the Lord for evermore. As you were hearing candidates to I111 the vacancy caused by my retirement 1t was not suitable to vls t YOU last summer. icistead I went, West to Saskatchewan and Manitoba, to the scenes of my early ministry, where I enjoyed one of the happiest and I venture to hope one of the most blamed and fruitful periods of my whole ministry. llirouzhoui. one whole summer I laboured 1n five places in the two provinces in Gaelic and Exigllah preaching 89‘ times. vlsltlng putorally 1B5 times. mverlng on these fields hundreds of miles dlapemlng the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper flve tunes, l5 making s public profession of their faith in Christ and coming into full fellowship with our church, thirty adults and chldrien were baptized. T-vo Sabbath Schools were re-open- ed with a posslbe attendance of 42. thirty-‘flve of whom began memor- Liitng the Scripture and Shorter Catechism out. of which l2 had gained Bibles before I left, the field. Two auxiliaries of the WMS. were organized with a membership be- tween them of 50 members. and fees paid amid splendid interest and mtbuslami. Never did I see more apparent cage-mus or selfdenylng efforts mode to attand the means. of grace, Sabbath and week days, taking the clrcumstmces—"drled out. areas“-- for years and consequently hard‘ Wing clrcumata-nces-lnto consldf eratlon-people thlrsted for the gos- pel deeply impressed under the preaching of 1t, well over 90 per cent, attended the services, some- times drlv ng for ten to twenty miles. To God be all the praise and izlorv In conclusion, 1n replying to the suggestion of one of your number as to paying you a vlslt at your next summer Communion season (July) who can say at this distance of tlme, but. God willing. and circumstances permitting I say I would dearly love to. I am. Sr. etc, ALLISTER MURRAY iPatrlot please copy) Claus Is Here Again (National Revenue Review), Santa (Tans with his sleigh and eight reindeer ls on the way again to the boys and girls of Canada. He has been getting ready 'for some time, and from import figures culled from the mistmns summed Santa ‘branch. his bulging pack 1n ad- dition to toys made in Canada, will include many from the United States. Germany, Japan, the Unit- ed Kingdom, Czechoslovakia and Frame. Imports from these coun- tries during the past. fiscal year amounted 1n value to $1,083,723. 'I‘h.ls was an increase compared with 1935-36 to $60,749. Toy 1m- ports from the United States were valued at $491,501. increase $91,661; from Germany $262,552, decrease $12,107; Japan $184,238. decrease $18218; the Unlled Kingdom $126,- 607, increase $323; Czechoslovakia ' S .173, decrease $514; France $2.- 571. GQCNSZB $1,676, Canada exported toys. lncludlng dolls. during 1936-37, to the value i of $279,841. an increase of $89,898 1 over the previous year. These toys went Kingdom, British South Africa. New Zefand and Australia, So much for pmsy statistics. It | would appear that martial toys such as soldiers and guns will be , little in evidence, constituting lex= than one per cent of the toys on the market. while mechanical toys. those that require the exercise of ingenuity and skill such ls oom- structfon kits, etc, are much fothe = fore. Somewiogd-bulldlng outfits ldown through the ages a i i GiIIQttoGffQSQuuI-wwahap provid jun. xhaa~lfmifltcnq~ . them ll aieyourncarutfiillaeu dealer's. _ ' . will; 1,2 . \_. Gill-HT! I ASH-TRAY Q Ten 9min; Gillette Blue “B122, ' (so blade‘) ll! l h“: a-‘fihfBakeliteash-trqh once f um egttiiii? M“ i Y fo-wihiliii-Tl’. ,2“ up: ' mcxlig: GILLETTE "Slllflgfguq . IIZQII an This i . _Gillette mpg: ‘fax: n outstanding u)“, H" no loose parts to fumble, Blades can be dung“ in three seconds. Attractive Win13“; durable tmvgl: "n: _cn¢ with si-iio 2 Giume BI Blldel-nrioe authenticity. Many small locomotives this year have six-wheel drive 1n- stead of the customary four-wheel- There are airplanes iliatfunctlonby principally to the United} remote control, streamllnedwagons with real headlights, trailers out- l fitted with furniture and curtains. I, organs so small that they can be ' carried under the arm yet when payed give forth real muslc. chromium-trimmed snowsleds, tele- phones with "television" iigtach- merits. movie projectors, and dolls houses modelled after the new dwellings of glasa Wheel goods are aw-lays popular; bicycles, veloci- pedes, doil and baby carriages. klddle cars. miniature iiutomobles and roller skates. Many sets of butldlng blocks this j/ar are groov- ed. which permits of incre elabor- ate construction work, and plaster .. .;t are supplied with split " ‘W Tll"ll"S. thus opening up real adventures ln handcraft Dolls are in a class by them- i selves. Always in favour, they have held their own against all comers d main ring In his rolce. GILIIITE "ARISTOCRAT" onus-rm - cam 001v new; qoddfllllted Glllettl Razor “d shell containing 5 PillctteBlueBlalsq d“!!! case. Al“, 10 additional Gillettefllues a BlmclemPt-ice I GIFT 8LT x tn" "c" $4- Gillette nltocrat One-pigcg outfit. Gold-plated Razorand Bladelhellijt. leather-covered can; n; ‘ silver-plated in mgh] case. C l u; ' so oinettgnfsiu: “fi Bus». Price 1T5? 'l“mentiworltliig’f’a:slgrfs"toifdd the best. loved of 5318- fifim dolls in the past fiscal W" W" valued at. $134534. 617ml"! Wm‘ clpally from Germany. the United States Japan and the Wilt‘ Kingdom. Dolls of nearly all nations. drill‘ sad 1n their latest, home-WWI styles, are tn demand. This Y?" reproductions of the Dionne 0'11"‘ tuplets are in the fore-front. Alw there are many grown-up. 1591M” plate dolls, such for instance l5 the travelling doll with he!‘ W‘ plane luggage and 20 PR1“ d shoes. To-dayfis dolls must be ltiyl‘ ishly dressed. This ls so truo that now real clothes for children A" often modelled after those worn b! well-know makes of dolls. MONEY IN JUNE HOLLYWOOD -<oP.i— T11 oonnnwt which paid June Wither! 11-year-old Georgian star $10“ a week exaplred w other d8!’ V‘ befom ft ran out hQ muffler a new one for $2,500 weekly N's Worth the Trip To Catch a "Whilif" of i-l 6' N's BRIGHT CUT “No wonder so many men ask for H l 1V8 BRIGHT CUT smoking tobacco for Christmas”, nyl Smil- Glvo this mellow, Virginia typo tobacco to any plpo sméker on your list and when ho says, “Just who! l wanted”, you can tell ho means It by the pleased Packed In pound cartons, pounfl tins and half pound tins for gift-giving. “The Smoothest Smoke” l-IICKEY o- NICHOLSON