w...“ ...,_, . .u.¢-..\= . . l0 per cent higher than the recen; _oe,aa tax are proving strong '_(,_)_(.'1‘0BER _ 9, H ruse 'I‘HF. contacted. _ ow‘- ‘pa. Maw ~So>s so: w“ I Silver Elu mink prices were surprisingly strong at the Septgm- ber 29th sale of the New York Alum‘!!! COIHPGIIY- The collection was a small one and it was 58 per cent sold at prices estimated at Silver Blu auction at Lampson, Fraser d: Hunt's. Ranch mink on the other hand met with price re. ni-stanoe 1n the afternoon and only B small pfflfintage 0f the 35,9“ skins were sold. A very good at. fendanoe was on hand for the sale of the ‘Silver Blus which a1.o in. eluded small quantities of other utations. The top price was $44.53 for the approximately 8,600 skins. Sale prices were stated to be shed; $3. higher than those at the reem: Immpson mutation sale cf mnk and about $1. higher than the Aulust sale of the New York Auction Company. O O O In contrast to this ranch think met with differences of opinion in lhlllpers litni-ts and buyers desire i0 Pi)’. In the Boods that were sold most. strongest competition was for females and for cheaper males which is in line with recent auctions of ranch mink. The market. continues slow this lweek as it has for u number of weeks. Manufacturers apparently are not in s position to ltock upon skins of any quantity. This applies particularly to Persian! lelrnb. All over the United States‘ there is the same cry that Septem- I ber fur business is c-ff. In 50mg places the difference frcm a year ago runs as high as 25 to 30 per cent, . I O O HOW"?! A- FbX. President of I, J. Fox, Inc., in a recent interview tells l that prices of quality furs must be readjusted if the present dcwn- ward trend of the present retail fur business is to be arrested. Tie re- tell fur business could be very good tibia season, said Mr. Fox. if prices were lower. Big consumer interest is being shown in the seasons new styles both long and short. but high prices and the 20 per cent ex- de- tea-rents to sales, He attributed the recent softening of wild mink prices and the apathetic response on the retail level to, these causes. Mr. Fox said he has no doubt but that Blink. especially wild mink. will ozone down In prce in the near mature. A definite indication of ‘the extent of the ccnsumefs fight frcm high fur miccs is seen by Mr. Fox fin the volune business being done throughout the ccuntry on cloth coats and on tax frse fur» lined and fur trimmed ccats. O O O The silver fox offering for the London sales which opeird in London, England, October 11th will Include 31,500 silver fox. 2.500 psrrl platina and 1.550 platina fox. These are distributed as follows: Hudson's ' Bar Company. 20.000 Silver fox, t,- l00 pearl plafinn. 1.200 platina; Anning. Chadwick dz lfever. Lid, will offer 6,500 silver, fox, 1.000 l platina and E50 irlatina; ctwood d: Holt, Ltd., will offer L000 silver fax. _ o - o _ lnndon appears to be the strong- est market for pearl platinal. Mont- real has been very cool towards thembut some fairly good prices comparatively have been received for |k1ns'scld in London in recent months. although the quantity which London can absorb is not great. , O O O \ _ Next Monday Herbert A, Nleman fi 00., will offer 10.000 fresh silver fox pelts for sale by the New York _Auctinn Company. it will be inter- esting to see how these sell. If they are bought in good quantity and not at too ridiculously 10w prices it will be a very encouraging sign. O O O The Seattle sale of mink, fox and other furs show declines of i0 per cent for ranched and wild mink and white fox. less than half the offer- Inga were sold. Ranch mink was 40 per cent sold with ordinary skins bringing from U10. to $17; wild mink was 20 per cent scld with skins bringing $12. to $205 Blue fox was 66 per cent sold with Aleutians bringing from $8. to $15 for bests and poor grades $4. to-Sl; Silver fox was 43 per cent. sold with select- Id skins bringing from 814, to $18. full silvers, I11 to $15. three-quarter, B. to $10; Platinum silver fox was l’? per cent sold, all colors brought from 010 to $30: White face silver fox was B2 per cent sold bringing I. to $14 for all colors. The manttty of fox offered Ma pmoll. O O O l The 01m. Norway, September sale of’ silver fox and mink showed a smell percentage sold. Of the 9.102 silver fox offered Only 23 per cent was sold and of the 6.652 blue go; only 17 per cent was sold. official report Dl-Id only few foreign buyers were present and the market we: weak. The collection of sliver and blue fox was described as under medium quality. Platinum fox was TIMELY IIIITES DII TOPICS IIIIIIIIEGTEII YIITII Iver Fox and Mink Farming described as fairly good and above l; a? medium quality. Concerning demand the company stated — "The medium and better qualities of silver fog. blue fox and platinum fox were mostly in demand. The avenge prices are therefore higher than they would have been were the sale more evenly devoted to merchand. ise on all price levels. Average prices were, silver fox $21; blue fox'$20; platinum fox $40; mink $14. The next Oslo sale will begin October 25ih. O O O We were very pleased the other morning to find in the mail a letter‘ fr:m A. K, "Ollie" McNeili, Fort QuA-p lie, Back. Ollie w.i.es... "Mr. and Mrs. Walter Chrlstman and Mrs, Clltfslimutfs scn, Lon Ritchie, visited me a few days ago. You will remember Mr. Ritchie Senior uteri some Iyems ago. l-le was a very keen breeder o: mink and-fox and a. real Etntlemazt in evezy acme of ‘.l-- ‘l mt. I a:l-.i a number of white faces and platinums in the early days and purchased my first psal platinums from him. Last evening in discussing the breeding of the original Colorado pearls ue discovered that the ancestors came direcfl; from your ran-ch. An American buyer bought foxes frcm you in i903 and re-sold some of the animals to Mr. Ritchie. A pup from one of them was the ;Grand Champion at the Denver, Colorado. fox show. This pup mated back to his dam produced the ‘first pearl platinum in Colorado. i I O - "There is no doubt but that lyour ranch had some marvellous animals. I have still a picture in my mind of the sire and dam of .the original white face which Icame from your ranch. They were ‘three-quarters or possibly seven' eighths slivers. The pelts appeared ‘to be always bright and never at any time went off color. l-lad I knovm as much about breeding at that time as I do now I could Ihave built up the finest herd in ‘Ithe world, We cut down a little ,0n our foxes last. year but l think ‘we will start building up again. l! had a short talk with my son John last week and he tells me jthat the public love the fox. He is dcing a good business in the fur store he and Dr". Lamb built. ,They have every type of fox alive 'in beautiful pens, well kept. and Ithe customer can take the type of skin he wants and knows he is getting the genome articlelfl... Thanks Olie, we are IIWBYS 813d to hear from you and particularly like the encouraging message you send. on: l The September issue of the Black Fbx Magazine and Modem Mink fBreeder is a special issue, devoted to the Nadcnal Board of fur jfarm organizations and its z-lmcs‘. 100 pages is most interesting. Authors of articles includ; Joseph H. Francis, Paul L. Reinhatt. Ronald Slephenstn and Roy D. Harmon, all o.’ whom attended the International Conference at Char- lottetown last July. Willard B. Sheldon has an article entitled Basic Facts of Fox and Mink Industry, shown by authoraiitive charts. These give the number of mink and fox ranches in each state in the Union with the number of breeding females in each ranch and the production. [Wisconsin tops than all with 31 per tent of the nation's total, followed by lVn-lneapflis with l1 per cent. It also shows the figures of mink pelts imported into the ‘United States in 1947 - 763.006. land the wild mink caught in the United States the some year M10900. The ranch mink por- ductio-n of the United States in 1047 was 1,526,768. and the esti- ‘mated number of mink produced loutside of the United States was 910,000, of which Canada produced the largest part. The estimated world production of lilver foxes in 194"! was, United States as per cent‘. equellinz 263.200: Canada 26 .per cent, equalling lasmo; Nor- way. m per cent. equalling 160,000: Sweden, a per cent, equaling 46,- 000; eleven other countries 1~1 P01‘ ‘cent. equdling 76300-- I O O I 'l‘i;c ccst of producing silver fox ‘in the United states was $36.00 Iand with interest and other charges ‘the total ran up to $8.18. Th! total cost of raising a mink in- eluding interest was $18-43. Tho material for this compilation {was obtained from the figures sub- mitted by the various countries at the International Fur Confer- ence held at Charlottetown in ‘July. wast-seas “assume Ellen '0 Diary I) an Inland Farmer's Wib " (QOhLIDIIQd 120m PIKE l) this day." It was delightful to be in "Aunt" Bet’: mind. It indicat- llege. It meant shared bits of new! and chuckles; it meant encourage- ment and sympathy and under- standing. O O O And the old house. settling low on its foundation though most comfortable was a place out of heaven to those who entered its peaceful, welcoming portals. . Little remains of it now, and the two are names added to a stone in a country churchyard. And the place? James would bc sure to ask that. A neighbor bought it, someone told me. for a mere song to make pasture land for his flocks and herds. and for wood and lum- ber. But comes the last of Septem- ber's days, I am sure to recall it as the anniversary of "Aunt" Bet's birthday. e - But. October this is, cool and damp as James had suspected when last night's cloud hid the stars. And Pat called at noon coming really out of “the uny- ln anyway?" he smiled broadly in answer to James’ hearty: "Come In!" "l'm a little lak the fellow". he said, hanging up his cap, “now whativer was his name? My mind's gettin’ that quare. I can't trust it at. all. at. all. Brother to Dinny Fogerty's wife he was . Mor- phy! thatfs what it was—-Terrence called after his ould grandfather he was, him that carne from Oire- land long years before—a little man he was with a whate whisker, I mind him well. he settled over there ferninst the Church. Knowed the ould lad well, I did. an’ many’s the yarn an’ laugh we had togeth- er. I mind wunst givin’ him a day at the potatoes. blues they were, an’ they came out. av the new land there as clean as clean an’ as long as your foot, I'm tellin’ yon now. . . " And James draw- ing a chair to the table for Pat to join us at dinner asked. “What wages would be going those times. Pat?" "Wages, is it‘? Isn't that what I was just goln’ to tell you about? When it came knockin'- off time—-we'd hud a bate to ate earller-—and I was just turnin’ to lave for home. he said: ‘Thank ye, kindly for the life‘ an‘ I may come over an‘ mak ye a "kayiey" some time!" We laughed. "But that wasn't the story you commenced to fell, Pat," I reminded him. t O O "Nather 1t. was now, Ellen. I do get to ramblin’. now don't I’! Well this Morphy-not the ould lad but his son, that. was brother to Dinny Fogerty’s wife, for it was there he spent his lust days, well one day when he was quate old he fell down the stairs there-Jndeed he mate have been kilt entoh-ely. know whativer saved him. A mir- acle I guess it was for he fell from top to bottom. An‘ she came run- n1n'~—a nervous-lak creathure she was, and near-cryin’ asked: "An' are ye bad hurled, Terryf!" An’ he said. meek-lak for a nace lad he always was. "Not a bit! an‘ I n. was comin’ down anyway. O l I And when James had gone with Jock to "run" cement at Rob's in day, Pat dug in his pocket. and from a mlscellaney of necessities- binder twine. some chaff and grain from the threshing and some sand from the potato-digging he has been laterly engaged in, and a bit of his precious terbacky, he produc- ed this cllpping. "I tuk it out av a plaper, and saved it for you thi kin‘ as how you mate lak it. Ellen. There's pretty words to it. I'm thlnkin’ an a lot av truth to it too. Indeed 1t wou1d_ be a better world. if we cud all follow what it says. now don't you think so yourself?" And I liked it, since it happened to be an old, old friend of my schooldaya. "Just to be tender, just to be true, Just to be glad the whole day through; Just to be merciful, just to be weet: Just to be helpful with willing Just to drive sadness away with B BUNK. Whether the hour is dark or bright. Just. to be loyal to God and right. Just to believe that God knows POSI- Just to let love he our daily key- That is God‘: will for you and ma]. Until Tuesday . Good-night. . . Diary . . . 1N TORRID ZONE have a temporete climax. Pastels and Gauthier also Silver Swle and IIIIIIK FOR s11: We offer you choice qualify mink in Breath of Spring and Hybrids Silvublu and Hybrids Whim (pure and 95%) for further particular: phone, write or visit: srevuni and none IIIIIK anus 3M Fihvoy Sh, Charlottetown, M1. I403L Hybrids I Sloildordt Koh-I-non and Glaciers TURES, ' 12 GRALD ST. ed so much and was such a ‘priv- - when." "Shuve an’ wasn't Ircomilf ' I don't place of the threshing this showery a button, a nail or two, a round of Elizabeth Benson Guy - Sn- prano of Brldgewater. Nova. Sco- tio, winner of top award for 194B on “Singing Stars of Tomorrow" program. MIss Guy will give a recital on October 14th.. In Prince of Wales College Hall. under the auspices of The Kirk Auxiliary. 8rd. Charlottetown (Kin-kl Troop Monday night's meeting was t-uf short to allow the Troop to visit the City Fire Station as part of Fire Prevention Week activity. Mr. J. S. Walker showed the Scouts the many types of apparatus and equipment and t-xpiaiilcu their I151‘ and employment at the scene nf the fire. Mr. ~Walker offered his further assistance to any Scouts wishing to qualify for their King's Scout Fireman's Badge. (Our thanks to Mr. Walker for his as- sistance and interest. .P.H.Q.) ‘ 1st 0‘Leary Group Tuesday evening of this week your Provincial President and Field Commissioner attended the reorganization meeting of the Boy Scouts Association in O'Leary Leg- ion Hall. A most enthusiastic rep- resentation of interested boys and parents were present and after a few remarks on Scouting were heard the meeting appointed a Group Committee to look after the interests of the Boy Scouts and W_olf Cubs In O'Leary. The newly formed Group Committee met at the close of the meeting and ap- pointed Mr. Jack Matthew's who was Scoutmaster of the O'I..eary 'Iroop which had such an excel- lent record before the war, as act- ing Scoutmnster with Mr. Peter Pure, chairman of the Group Com- lnittee, as assistant. The Cub Pack will be led by Miss Marcia Pate assisted by Mrs. Fred Champion and Mrs. MacLean. The spirit and interest shown by the meeting assured the success nf Scouting and Cubbing ‘m 91-6819. and brother Scouts throughout P. E. I. wish them the best of luck in good Scouting. ist Lennox Island Group \our Field Commissioner was out to Lennox Island Wednesday afternoon and spent a very enjoy- anlc time while there, through the courtesy of Rev. Father Mclnms and Chief Jadis. The boys were brought together and, after e short explanatory talk, were div. Cub Pack. The Scout Troop was divided Into two patrols: the Sea- gull Patrol with Patrol Lender Rueben Tuplin and tlieSquirrelpa. mild. trol under Patrol Leader Jack Just to be thoughtful _ as a Sark. The Cubs divided into the Child. White and Blue Slxcs with Jos- Just to be gentle and kind and eph Jadis Sixcr for the former and Fred Srully Sixcr for the Blues. A variation of Kim's game irled into a Scout Troop and a T991. was played indo ' . ft h‘ Jult to be cheery when things go two games wereolsplfiyezr i: WTMII. school grounds outside. Chief Jndla uvittonaei i f Just in His promises ever to Brazil lies almost entirely in the torrid zone, though large sectionl l ALL TIIE TIME It’: Budd's You May Need! IECAUSEjauIty kidney: Ief exceu acids and poisonous wulea my in the lyeiun. Barhchu, headache: and that "fired-out" feeling often follow. Dodd’! Kidne Pill: help restore your kidney: lo normal ac ‘ p you feel better, work‘ better. Be aura you get the genuine Dodd’: Kiclne Pille, a favourite I a century. You Doclcls DIfIIInevPiII; BIIIILTEIVS ELECTRICAL SERVICE HAVING OBTAINED TII'E_HELF OF SKILLED ELECTRICIANS I AM NOW READY TO DO ALL KINDS OF ELECTRICAL WIRING. Also to Sell, Install and Repair most all electrical devices such us: IRONS, TOASTERS, HOT PLATES, all kinds of LAMPS and LIGHTING FIX- FLUORESCENT LIGHTS, ELECTRICAL WATER PUMPING SYSTEMS, ELECTRIC MOTORS, AUTOMATIC STOKER, COAL FURNACES, REFRIGER- ATORS, REACH-IN AND WALK-IN COOLERS, LARGE ROOMY SHOW-CASE COOLE-RS FOR STORES. . BEFORE BUYING SEE MY PRICES. ALSO-ASK FOR ESTIMATES ON HOUSE WI-RING WE GO ANYWHERE ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR UHARLLYFTETQWN ——— ——— M PAGE NINE GEIITRAL GUARDIAN This column la reserved for new: vi local interest. but advertising u! a newly nature may be inserted at five cents a. word. strictly ply- lhle in advance. (JBAWELL fur Photographs. IEMMIES TAXI Phone I28 AT YOUR SET-ICE - Aruiut Coal Co. Phone 2498. MEN'S TWEED TOP cons, regular $25.00 value. On sale $12.95. Henderson d: Cudmore. JUST ARRIVED. — Shipment of Nylon Hosiery. Newest shades. Kennedy's Ladies’ Wear. COME T0 the Charlottetown Hospital Bazaar, Monday. October .11th-16th, at the Armouries. Many new games. Opens at 8 Phi. l VISITING CITY—A visitor to ‘the City recently was Mr- James t“Jimmie") Steele, son of Mr. and lvirs. Stanley Steele, of 15 Ailey Street. Since returning to Mono- ton where he is employed with a hrickiaying firm. Jimmie was el- ected flnanclal secretary of the Hod Carriers Union. Moncton local of the A. F. of l... MwMILLAN-LAMONT WED- DING-—The marriage took place on Thursday, Sept. 16th at. 2.00 p.m.,' at St. John's Anglican Church, Truro, of Shirley Faye daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Lamont of Truro, to l..eith Max- well lviacMlilan. son of Mrs. J. W. MaoMillan and the late MrsMac- Millan of West Covehead, P. E. Island. Baskets of giadioli and autumn flowers were arranged in the church for the ceremony, which was performed by Rev. G. A. Thomson. Miss Jennie Leban presided at the organ, and the choir rendered beautifully "O Per- fect Love". The bride was given ir. marriage by her father and wore a suit of grey worsted with accessories in pink and black, hcr flowers being a. cot-sage of pink Sweetheart. Roses. Miss Violet Penny, friend of the bride, was bridesmaid and wore a dressmaker suit of blue wool with matching accessories and corsage of pink roses. Mr. Cecil Lamont, brother of the bride. supported the groom. Following the ceremony a. recep- tion was held to the immediate family and friends. after which the happy couple left on a. honey- moon over the Cabot Trail. A host of friends join in wishing Mr. and Mrs. Maclviiilan a long and happy wedded life. JUNIOR LEAGUE MEETING- The regular monthly meeting cf the Junior League of the Char- lottetown Hospital was held Tues- day, Oct. 5th at the Nurses’ Home. The president, Mrs. John Connoi- ly presided. The minutes of the previous meeting were then read and approved. Many lovely hand knitted articles including sweat- ers, socks, mitts, tams, bonnets. booties, etc.. were turned in for the club's booth at the Hospital bazaar next week. The members were asked if each one wottld give a. small gift to the Student Nurses‘ Certificate table at the bazaar. The sewing committee re- ported sixty-one articles had been turned in during the month. The members arranged some of the filial details for the cabaret dance to be held near the end of the month. There being no further business the meeting 56101170961 0" motion of Mrs. Ed Gallant. 5B6- onded by Mrs. Carl Green. Tea. was served by Mrs. Howard Mc- Inuis and Mrs. Wm. MacDougall. will act. as Scoutmaster and Cub- master for the boys with the help of Father Mclnnis and Mr. Daley. Best \vishes to the Scouts, Cubs and leaders in their new enter- prise. the 1st Lennox Island Scout Group. The Kirk Pack The Kirk Pack held its first meeting of the season on Monday at 5 o'clock and will have a meet- ing this coming Thanksgiving Monday. Three new Chums were Intro- duced io the Pack and we hope they will soon become full feidged Wolves. The New Chums are Gerry Watts. Paul Warren and Derek Buntnin. Part of the meeting time was spent in organizing the Sixes and it looks as if the new Gold Six under Sixer Peter MacNutt is go- ing to be the first Six to have the requirement of Six Cubs. The Blue Six of Alex Murchison is ahead in the Inter-Six Competition. The Cubs are reminded about working on their Collector's Badge and their First Star. Don't. forget. Cubs. you can't wear your Pro- ficiency Badge until you get your First Star. The Pack feela particularly for tunate in securing the assistance of two Patrol Leaders of the Kirk Troop to help with instruction and ‘games and it is a good sign for {the future progress of the Pack ‘and Troop to have these P. L. as- ‘slat us. The P. L.'s are Bob Nelson Iand Briar Chandler. Samuel L. Boulter - PHONE IZZS-L W.C.T.U. NOTES deli-OD} THE HOUSE 0F LIFE _ To be happy a boy or girl needs a healthy body as his or her House of Life. e0 children should be taught about the body, the way 1t works, and how to take care of it. The body is made up of millions of tiny living cells. so small that they must be magnified to be seen at all. Look at the inside cf an orange, and what do you see? Many small separate parts like a tiny teardrop of juice in a fine skin covering. That is what a cell locks like under the microscope, These little cells are of many different shapes and kinds to fit them for all the different kinds of work they have to do. Also different kinds of food must be given the body for diff-Brent. bcdy needs: ' For GROWTH food must be converted into bone and muscle; Fbr STRENGTH food must be changed into energy by body pro- cesses; For WARMTH food must be combined with oxygen other body processes; For REPAIR of body titsues, on account of the wear and tear of activity, food is necessary and also the rubbish left by the work of the cells must h; removed ' But the tells do not require much attention, for they go about their work so quietly amd efficiently that the owner of the bc-dy does not even know they are there at a1. The primary needs of the body are food, water fresh air. and to have unwanted waste matter car- ried away. Also the body must be protected from injury by accident m‘ poisons. t... ‘n! CANADTANIZATION MEETING At a very fine meeting in Grace United Church on April 211st, when Rev. R, E. Spence presided. the pro- gramme was sin-attired by Mrs. Geo. Briton, Superintendent of Cruadlanlzatiuxi and Citizenship. The visit of an S. G. M. group to an Indau reserve was described by Miss Jasmine Lund of the Student Christian Movement. There are hungry minds in Can- ada. as well as in Europe. Miss Lund she-wed us how eager the Indian pee-pie are to co-operate. A fine description of the activit- ies of the new Chinese Church in Winnipeg was given by s member Mr_ D. Pines. There is no delin- quency among the children of this congregation. v srme impressions of Canada, as it is at present and what it's in- iluence among the Nations would be in the future, were given by an English university student. who intends to make his home in Can- ada. lVLiss Paula Barbour, of the (okr- ed congregetEon, gave a fine rendit- ion of "The Holy City." followed by a piano sol: by a Javpanese Canadian. Miss AIITB McCouchy. We shall expect to hear more of these talented young women. A film, "The is Our Canada." obtained from the National Film Board. McArthur Building. Win- nipeg, proved most istructive. WHEN IN HIGH PLACES SHOULD NOT DRINK HUMHIREY MITCHELL Miisfor CONSULT: J. A. Martin. District Annuities Representative. 7 Bu“ Block‘, Queen Street N., Tel: 1530. IIIIRIITIIY IIIX SAYS- foretell that it won't be long before Friend Husband will be looking around for someone who is easier on the eyes. Curiously enough. however, while men being spick-and-span, they do not, as a sex; their habits. or go to the trouble of beautifying themselves in order to please the feminine fancy. Millions of women, in order to keep thin. who counts his calories so that Nor do men consider it necessary themselves attractive to women. themselves out. like Solomon tached to a shirt they can't bear to change it, like ragamuffins. dates. they look so much like tramps. whole married life wondering why she married a man who sits around . home in his stocking feet and whose clothes are reminiscent of every- ~ thing he has had to eat for a couple of days. Daintiness is also included in every man's dream of fair women. He wants his Girl Friend, or his wife, to know how to comb her hair the newest way and for her to wear gay, pretty dresses and to be re- dolent want to be seen out with him when beard on his face. and if she doesn't get a thrill out of being kissed by i. him when his breath smells of a mingling of whiskey and tobacco and t‘ ~ u- n oet( I : When the doy comes for you to ooze up, will you I50 do- pendent on others-er will you enjoy freedom from worry on o CANADIAN GOVERNMENT ANNUITY! Don't look boelr and soy "If Only t: s" Look forward and soy“I Will." O A low-cool Canadian Govorhmenl Annuity guarantees you o: much o: $1200 u year for life. I No medical Examination I: required; 0 Your Annuity cannot be seized under any law. You connol lose your money even if your payments full info arrears. O Anyone, from 5 Io 85, is eligible. eAnnuities Branch DEPARTMENT OF LABOUR A. MoeNAMAlA Deputy L.‘ Fsfer AI esW Pmzye x... (On/fie; ' . 1 Mull this Coupon ledcy POSTAGE FREE __>___ Annullin lunch. ' DOpIIImInI of Loboll. Ottawa. Flecuund m commie mroamanou obaul Canadian tie-ohms... Anrmlfin. . nA-n - (PRINT CLEARLY) (Continued from Page 2) NO CALORlE-COUNTING lay such stress ou women feel called upon to change for instance, go hungry but there is probably not one man in a million he may retain his boyish figure. to doll themselves up to make If they are clothes-conscious, they dike in all his glory. But if they get. so at- they go about looking Plenty of girls are ashamed to be seen out with their And many a wife spends her of Chanel No. 5, but he thinks she is a fussbudget. if she doesn't I he has a three day's stubble c! i The tho-logical effects of taking doses of danger to the country. Alcohol depresses the function of the brain first. serious in discharge of their duties, ments in dirlomatic lose the world to free cry for generations. All that has been accompbshed b of tofalftzriati de-spciism. tan h failure to realire the psy- small alcohol is a source of higher It is not only theoretically, but practically. possible for an Amer- ican state mun to make commit- conferences without compensating guarantees. wh'le ullder the itiflucnce of morti- erate doses of alcohol, which will men and bind our chidren to political slav- the death of millions of patriotic men. fighting to ward off the threat lost in one tour of driukini, mound a conference table. A battle can be lost by befud-‘led thinking causei by doses of alcohol which do not onions. the lily and painting the rose. many fine men are wrapped up in enough to grab them. ‘That. means that the first drinks . taken are the ones which are most their effects tipcn men who must use their intelligence in Unfortunately, these "campaigns for moderate drinking," by the liquor‘ traffic and its friends, turn out to be simply "campaigns for drinking." forgetting the "moder- ate“ part. ALARMED OVER RESULTS IN PENNSYLVANIA "Seventy-one licenses were lost in the September 9 local option el- ections (In Pennsylvania). That statistic, more than any of the Y others emerging from the recent balloting, will hammer home to licensees the seriousness of the e dry threat and the importance o.‘ guarding against it. “No previous elections saw such intensive prepartion by trade forces. There was no lack of literature or Why men think that women, who care more for the small amen- ities of life than they do. are indifferent to men's personal appearance, no one knows. Perhaps it is because men think that they are so at- tractive just as they are. that to dress them up would be like gliding Or maybe women intuitively know how mussy suits and they have sense .- c! " I " I‘.\1AI\IAVTT“3“\ “our” amiun noose. " “V! owl" B I o Fxgliwkcsh on tently IVMCTHITIE. The times have changed. Dr'n‘<- lng which was formerly cf lit]? significance. may now be of very- great significtnce, The president should not drink; senators shovli not drink; repre- sentatives should not drink; gov- ernors should not drink; the: in t Czmmtifld of the armed fort-es should not drink, 1f they do drink it may result in great harm not only to themselves. but to the men and women who look confidently to them for leadership and sacrtfical service. Men in places of responsib ility may well say. "I will not drink while the lives and fortunes of my follow Americans ere in my handaP-‘Phe voice. AIDOIIOLIO WIVES AND MOTHERS "use "dT"T‘k9““1'S5~" leadership o: enthusiasm in IIIKIFS-{l MON 7- The Inms 0: "RIG"? ca" h!’ try ranks. The work of organizingi 5505515,“ 1MB. thrown away by bmiscontlrct of me campflgn we,“ we“ and‘ Wm‘, _ z r w ____ OQAN/twnr dnmd"? "'°°F5'" 33's 'w'""'- “I th uuai except! ns l1 cute. ‘t " "I ' home, wetjlabstalners from iutoix- in: field did thelrojobs. I s n §§§”.°5e',,' can s, we. -niann_red and cons s- usm] 71 1509M“ we" 10*» A.‘ TNE Lowe,“ , Hutq "If tap-room proprietors and other dealers in liquor had any sense they would realise that the one thing that might compel rub- lic opninion to accept restoration of prohibition is the wrxker‘. fan-allies caused by alcoholic wives end mothers. They should dis- courage, not seek to spread. drink- ing by women. They should lend their support to campaigns for mod- erate drinking as the best thing for — 5001""!- evcryflnn. Including their own in- risriT-Eiitorlal 1h Phiird-lphin nun-one INVERNESS SCREENED SI 5.00 per {on _ I ERAS DOD. $14.75 per ion t. autumn a. co. PHONE 240 08s. h: L\.L.. u’ ‘F’ ‘