We will “be buying 've and dressed fowl nd chickens for the _alance_ of the- season it“ highest market rices. ' »= large quantity 0f - essed geese ucks from December l 0th to 15th. Be sure -= nd get our prices be- . ore selling. ' SWIFT CANADIAN CO., LTD. l J uchpss ,Qrulslls will?» . ~ EST INDIES THREE CRUISES . . - Due. I2 (r6 #1») .1. Jan-dill (s: any.) ‘ . . . e . yoga Three times this winter the new Duchess of Bedford will ' south- wardw the sunnyharboursand coral islnndsol the (‘ur-ibbean. Be aboard her for one of these voyages. Bales areas iowas $200 for the Christmas exclusion and 8300101‘ the longer ' The Duchess has a 20,000 gonregistered tonnage and ligh preseurm " tlon. ' obeyour local spent r o. nation soar-rut District Passenger Atent so King Streetpiblnt John. N- Ii- ' C rii 'P cl gs-fifrfi zrlylzrrqzlreqvll. [a t," ' m Imus" olrlraflor TRAVI. svsrsu .We will also require and .- - .7:'_:il::: “A girl who ls on her third lap within an hour ls bound to be a winner." Q1 TH EY SHOULDWT OREAK Old Soak: My, my, but rriy joints are still-they fairly creak. Friend: That shouldn't be— you're always pretty well oiled. Why dld we ever marry? We're entirely dliierent lrfevery way. V ' He: She: You flatter mo. , / A Professional Cards Mark R. McO-uigarl- ._____.._______________ McLeod & Bentley. "J. A. BENTLEY W. 8. ‘$1051.51, n, q Office: 180 Richmond MONEY T0 LOAN Ohar-lottetllwh. P. I. I. Dr. c; .0. Archibald I Ufbuilllazlll; Post Grlllilate Q ma“ named “and Hospital and Throat. so FOND OF SPORTS “She la very had of sports." "yes, she gees with the touch est set OIVIIIOII I was law.” eyes flashing. . will say goodnight." » with beaux and dates. outside- oi study hours, that she had not time for him. even ii he'd shown a des- ire for her society. His reiusal to do so hurt her pride. Her oooflndilier- ence hurt his. An impasse had a- risen, and neither the sch oi’ Hemietta nor the regrets oi the dis- consolate Ted collld break it. Shirley and Rodney met, oi course at an occasional party, or at a loot- bali mass meeting, but they seldom talked. They passed each other with o. cool nod on the campus. From the stands at Douglas Field, o , Shirley a watched Rodney lead his eleven to victory. He was the idol o! theUni- versity that year. From the ver- anda oi his fraternity house, across the road, he noted how frequently Gordon Phelps red car was parked bailore the door oi the Gamma Sig- ma lodge. Phelps seemed to have won the inside track. Just before Thanksgiving, ‘lied an- nounced that Shirley would attend their fraternity dance. Hume's bringing her?" Rodney was startled into asking. . “No use asking you to, 1 suppose?” “Certainly not. I'm in training, as you darn well know. 1 sharrt even show up." “Then I guess we'll let Wilkins do it. The kld'il be crazy with joy. We'- ve got to have her, you Can't let the most popular girl on the us escape us.’ " ' Rodney laughed, with well-feign- ed indllierence. "Is she that?" "You bet your liie she is!" said Ted. "'I‘hat girl has more dates than a senior has cuts. She could run two an evening and tour on Sundays, ii Phelps didn't horn in all the time. I guess he's out to win, all right." He sighed lugubrlously His own ro- mance with Henrietta was not pros- perlng. . , So Shirley, slim and distractlngly pretty in a little black satin gown to the iratemity party, and each dance on her program was out and re-cut and cu‘. again. __ Rodney tried his best to keep ' sway. but he didn't succeed and he‘ sauntered in alter supper. Shirley was surrounded, at the moment, but the black-coated circle broke res- pectfully at his approach. The man who is president ol a fraternity, a leading iigure on the campus, and captain oi the lootbell team is a. personality to be reckoned with. He asked her coolly: . “Will you dance?" And quite as coolly, she replied: "Mr. Wilkins has this dance." Rooney's eyes searched the crowd dlilltlif0lllld those oi the luckless Wil- k s. "It's all right," he ‘told her’. “Freshmen give way before seni- ors." . “I'd rather dance with Mr. Wil- kins," she flared. For answer, he circled her waist with his arm and swung her into a tango. She danced with the lightness oi thistledown, but he leit her re- sentment, in spite oi that. ‘You detest me, don't you?" he re- marked humorously. "I really hadn't thought about it," she said, stilling a tiny yawn. "You look like your cousin, that ‘lttle villi Dom boy," he startled her] by saying. "Really?" She wasn't interested. "It he had your spirit, he'd be better oil." ~ “How do you know I have spirit?" He laughed. ~ g “Ii you'd seen your expression when I made you dance! You looked as though you'd enjoy slapping me." . “So sorry," she answered lightly. “I thought I'd trained myselt not to show ‘when I'm bored." He released her abruptly. his black "My mistake, Miss Van Dom. I lleerl Iellil "Stall" muc with heart I"!!! Eyes and lllflplylll‘ ma“; sleep. _I wouldwakew in the nigh‘ ollw. Bayer Building - . . Great George Street. ~ llloe Hours-D to [£30, L80 to 5.0a lcDonald &‘ McPhe . A. Ami-DONAL: r11. auras: - L. . IIBISTEBB. sgonusws, are. rromlr may, ' Iii». Bnlidlna. Charlottetown. iiln a Mathieson I. BILL A neighbor lady so‘... u o; ggulatarield’ ' ‘ them n. r.. rrsrmsson wgsytiiivl olllllyllook m boxes." n‘ PriraSOnshox stslld dealers, or mailed direct on orlcs by NERvlPnn The '1‘. Milbufli Toronto, Ont. ‘ FOR SALE ~ ' n» ‘ ' .. mrrrn-"rmrr e THOMPSQNS SUFFOLK ‘| Iljfllfllfllillfflniilflc Tllemeesrr Illllsulsllllls was seized upon by another hover- ing partner. But her heart was beat- llapisg esl Pesslisi”i.'§“.£'.°‘§;’;él.f‘““ °°‘°' "“' """""' Mrs. Fred r. Averill, 188-l2th Ave. l sh“, I d?“ cm‘ I m“, m," In. Ear. Nose Galas-w Alteswrltvl-“II I nojglne ‘had already vanish i. and LOOK I0 lilS-DIGESTION . the method docto mugging. feverish belly or child dome yam“, A]. ‘a jiily. tailors dosdes said ‘he's digest- Illl II II ' > s%lg? To, B‘ I d look lor the , etcher signature on tho "Per . ~ . She nodded indilierently, as she "I was beastly rude," she thought. .._.___-...__.‘ --- »~a______ __ BABY N01‘ . "Bibi" wit all» when "will: lonal laws d ittee and: nus MILBU RN S 5mg: guillglflttlidlseafig Zffifgk" gelled. mlflfli". mt there m- tiu HEART constipated ind ilslgrabia. surety’ "'°‘°“fi;_' ~__‘ __...____.1 ..- ' endorse, and mi - faodnsy reluaed u: be more than Polite to Shirley Van Doro; and Shirley was so thoroughly occupied with shoulder straps oi crystal, came ‘ The Guordiiiri». vrNext Friday %so'ossaoaaob"A Henrietta said, when- she her alter the dance: _ “Did you ‘and Rod‘ light 8801a? He looked asiil you." , _ ‘He's lnsuiierablei" flashed Shir- ley - it oil so rottenly!" rietta. “You siuiply sirlgle thing in c , But they had. alter all. Twrrdsys fringed the little university" town, came upon a chestnut thoroughbred hitched to a. tree. The horse threw up its head and whirlnied. _ Shirley went to it and patted its shining neck. “You lovely, beautilul. thing‘? ‘Shirley's heart was crowded sud- denly with memories oi that brief visit to Kentucky; o! a. darkyouth who had. seemed to open the book ol romance to her. “I love you," she said aloud to the horse. She looked up with a start to lind Rodney Sheldon regarding her with an expression hall-grave, hall-in- credulous. ~ ' (CONTINUED) Annual lMeetling WV. A. A. A. C. (Canadian Press), ', ' ' ‘TORONTO, Nov. 30--Pfld:tlh!1lett‘l; rapid progress o women's in Canada.‘ was expressed-today by Miss Marlon Balding oi Saint. John. N. B.,.at the annual meeting o! the Women's Amateur Athletic Associa- tion oi Canada. App Canadian Women's Bolt Ball- A880’ elation lor dmllduon was accented tiorrs- constitution. The also decided o» ask the custodian Basketballhssocleltion to arr-asst 0 meeting oi the various DEB-Uzi“ tions to discuss the mention oi di; var-allied’ basketball. ' John n. DeGruchy in his resort on women's athletics said he thought Dr. A. S. Imnb. r-resldent ol-the Amateur Athletic Union .0! Canada should have consulted t wolneus ‘re pariilcl- pation ol women in tiny 011ml?“ es. Jrrie report recommended the A. A. U. oi 0. that the W-A- so. d: c. be given lull power W govern in all matters not aflwtlflli men's sport ‘or the amateur laws in general‘. Women Want -Cadet_?_'rainifl.8 EDMONTON. Alta... Dw- IPW ° vote oi 35-9 the Local Council 13:‘ Women declared itseli in iavor Q cadet training in the schools. The!‘ was no discumion on the qllfifllimn-l but alter the results were announcq ed it was exriained that lastytl-l‘ the government made a law 91'0"?!‘ ing that cadet trainlns b1; optional- subjeot to the will oi the: parents- Tha Ednlgnton. public, sc l00l board had sent a qucstionalre ) the D81‘- ents oi Edmonton child en. 118K111! their Pwish irfthe matter. land 95 n“ cent o! the parentsrequllsbcd the‘ the, draining be given. , billing with another iresolutlon theattenti n ol the meetlfl! Y" called to e fact that in seeklns le-‘flslation providing lor tilt: natur- alization oi alien women. i110 NM“ ionai Council would be asitius 1'0! something counter to the Jaws oi the, remainiler oi the world. and mightlconsd quently be doinil 110ml? more inJu ice than good. abulniinl to the ch rman. Thequrstssn ‘is now in the hands ol the i tor-nat- ons ot .mothers know, sud see how your baby irll roves. A few dro s of urely-vegetab ,.harmless Fietc er’s ‘ storls. makes the most iretiuL. comfortable in " as he t genuine Castor-in, s-___ '~___-_ HOGS y. » SYD/IINS RSS1‘ SNOWIFALL Last night‘ the stars like Whistle- down, - Wont; fluttering down greet , bank.- - sol sisal.‘ » - ' l i . A mother a ‘got tangled in no igs rEnmd/rhs chimney" stack mi ,_ di one tremendous "Just Shattered iihe moon m iairy ,dust, a And look through the r: outed ' i -l t ‘l _ The stars lie scattered on the ' ~" "r ~mm Page - . a fm-dnrcrhs Chatelaine . J."- A. ch35, 11.31.... rejoined spoken interview here iodaypn the he'd like to belt ‘Q never ‘saw two peoplewho hit mourned Hep- lliavemt one later, Shirley, emerging from a stab}! through the autumn woods {that ligation 0f llliB subject tolanproval ol the Asdoqll- ‘ yathlemc “on be on voting ion in June, July, and August, and Lat Amsterdam against b0 him that New Zeaiand butter is Points O-ut How y." Trade Treaty t With Canadian Farmers. , .. TORONTO. Dee. L-"Concessions to Australia which will perlnlt the importation oi butter into this country cannot be other than dis- astrous to the dairying industry in Western Canada and the Maritime Provinces," declared J. A. Calder, o! Regina, president 0L the National Dairy Council, in an eittremelyout- trade treaty with Australia." Mr. Calder lound little danger to tion that Australia and New Zeal- and butter comes into Canada in large quantities. but he paints a vi- situation in the other parts oi the Dominion. - ."Here you have‘ the greet iiuld milk and cream markets ol: the big huge market lor fluid milk, the most paying form in ‘which the products oi a dairy larm can ‘be marketed. Any surplus can go to the condo laetories or the powdered milk plants. In the Wbst we have no such alternatives-it is a matter‘ ol butter production and that only. "It is all very well to say that ii we cannot produce enough butter iot- our own national use we should buy it within the Empire, but the iact is not that we cannot but that we will not in‘ the lace oi the compaition lroln New Zealand. I “The situation is just this," ex- plained the western expert. “W: are going to see the results oi twen- ty years pi work cut down in ayear. Inieoilwehadnoeowsintheweel that is irom dairying point oi view. 1n 192d we made in the West l2,- 000.000 lbs. or butter. ‘ . . "There has been talk oi the price oi butter fat being out ol propor- tion to the price oi wheat, there is only one reason for that and it is the nature oi the competition we are called upon to meet. In 1928 we made only 7.000.000 lbs. oi but- ter. From 1905 steadily up to three years ago we showed an annual in- Australian trade agreement. ' names: noun ' Australia alone would have hurt us so badly but the treaty was ex- tended to include New Zeland. In i915 with its war conditions and $3 wheat, we didmot experience any halt in our: development oi the in- tition has come in that we are go- lng back. The dairy larmer oi the western provinces must meet this situation. He has butter in prolus- he approaches a dealer in Vancouv- er" lor a. price. The dealer tells qmted lor January delivery at 36 rents af. pound. The Canadian lar- mer must pay-three cents freight to the coast’ and the dealer has to cut ofl‘ from hill! thecarrylng charges, insurance and hheulsk oi deteriora- tion in storage. That means a 30- wiil not milk cows- at 30 cents un- less he is iorced to it b starvation and they are not stsrvin Another peculiarity is that if Toronto wants butter and there are 10,000 pounds oi Canadian butter and 10,000 pounds oi New Zeaiand butter at ilancoilver. ‘The New Zealand but- ter can come to Toronto at a lrelght rate-cl $2.30 per hundred. That is an "import" rate the Cana- dian butter must pay 33581-2 per hundred. _ USE TBOTECTIOU ‘ “For the first time in the west the word protection has been open- ly used and openly endorsed by the :ecent meeting oi the Saskatchewan Producers’ Association. The feeling ls growing that the industr must be given a chance to suppy the home market ii it is going to live. Mr. Calder bases‘ his ideas oi the dalrylng situation upon the leet shat climatic conditions must be inlo taken consideration. "The ;he aiternsto summers oi New Zea- iand ‘and, Canada. You will hear it said. ‘Why what's the trouble? Your sroduction l r the last lour or live ncnths was, he grebtest it ever was". mu have hid s. prospbrous season.’ that tails to take into considera- iion that we‘ ought to be increesinl irddllctloll‘ by ram-W wands 1 u; just to keep pace with our own leveiopment in penuletlvn- rwe-osn serve our own 1960910 11m butter-in summer. but will! l retort-born height me or only a M; s hall s pound‘ on New rgglmd butter we cannot produce n winger pt the ssrneprioe thatthe NW6?‘ m: be ilsht from ti" Australia ; H ll r ts _, . OntarloandQuebecInthesugges» vid picture oi the dlllerencc in the a cities. Across the border therefis a - crease" in production then came the ' clustry; It is onlywlince the compe- ' . . Y<>»»’l 1 final @115 ' 1 up your Xmas list noun‘: w from this delightful irray debs-mars ‘ P s and Pencils which W" "l" pereo rneeselllfllf?‘ a! r . rlens.~ ~ H» tE-xre-sharp-to yollmlld standard for h‘ efliciency in writing instruments.“ L q ,. nsgil; A ‘y. A illustrated in rose- wood, alia in "Ill black and grog!!- A I $4 " " A ' ." ‘"3 . ‘ ' . - ' A. ::\l-.!:rsh.st:|:l’en. D To mud. ‘ hm ' . ‘ - ular $4. pa " ihifitfililir and rosewood. $3.50 $6.» . . ' B- firfiaajw: . ’ E, ‘An attractive 7 green, also in earl]. Penfix“ - ' i’ blue black, rad and - h ‘magma 0"" red, rosewopd, l: a. Illustrated in jade also barrel with gold filled bands. $10 The new Gold. Seal ' -—t ls a PERFECT » ‘ $5.. l . 4 F, New oversiaa Evar- l sharp to match till - , O ' $l0. G id Seal Pan. ' B "$15.1 it'll-it'll: o-ly i» l» and hlaclt and pqgrl black. At 50am only. In standard size, in blaclt am‘! pearl and other color the new pencils to ‘ match the $8 Gold Seal Pens in many colors. \ \ ANEW DESK SETS FOR ' HOME OR OFFICE. Eversharp presents a most complete and attractive» r e of desk sets from $5 . tllnglili). Illustrated to the leitis a charming model with round Pedrara Onyx base and Rose- _. , wood Desk Pen, $751K » At the right is illus- trated tlle new Australia, there was a three cent tion ii our butter industry is to last. tax on butter lor consumption that country, and that the iund thus derived was so used as to give cent price. Now tin? western farmer a bonus o; six cents per pound on every pound oi butter that was ex- ported irom the country. biltter and cheese oi any portion oi the British Empire, with the ex- ception o! the British Isles them- selves." says Mr. Calder, "and it has the worst climatic conditions lor the dairying industry oi any Exhibition held by the city oi Gias- rs. part oi the Empire. It is that iact gow, Mr. Calder pointed out that inthat must be taken into considera- large airposltlongbullding. Four lull size " , comprising a five apartment houses, a. bungalow and tact with the ports oi entry as is one ol the Atholl steel type were the West oi’ Canada and the Mark’ displayed. ‘The bungalow consisted time Provinces there is no hope lor oi live looms and_ beth- All were Qle dairylng industry under iurth- furnished complete to the minutest er u ncesslo to our Australian and detail. Otheinexhibits consisted of New Zealand competitors." materials and lurnishlrlgs lor hou- '_'_"_"@"'—'— ses. ‘pets and" even dresses lob! IIOIIISVIS SHOWN IN HALL worn ln the homo. - _---..o>---- . . Norway hes the greatest per 08PM marine tonnleé in the world and’ e in Where territory is in direct con- "Canada has the lowest tarifl on Complete houses were shown in the recent Housing and Health second arri alihations ior Scotland, in “ks m‘ Kelvin Hail. a/motor driven stripping. oasis oi the trouble," he says, "iil ._ Th.» Perfect Familq rial... For every household pur is the most dependable \' HETHER it's ilremi or biscuits, cakhs. or pastry. Quaker Flour gives perfect baking results every _ time. ' Because Quaker Flour is absolutely llllllilfill arid ‘absolutely lt is milled from wheat which lzus shown, unrlur rigorous tests, the highest lililling qualities and fond dependable. - value. it is tested every hour flour up to the rigid Quaker standard. livery day it must pass our actual home-lacking te These three tests protect yonironl ‘baking failures-h They make possible our swooping guarantee." ll‘ docs not give you the most pericct sxrtiafnrtlgln,’ tho cleulcr islluthorized to return your money. . _ ‘ ' . ' Packed in machine-sewn sacks, Quaker 1 Flour is’ not touched by lluniall hands.’ "if, ' ‘- ' I pose Quaker Flour during milling in cnsurc a Si. r, ' Quaker gFlour