_ ;-1.1: lvl I ,iff lifli lliiili _ . rf ‘lil ’.- +_» i ._--, .. lc:-v,i_ 11,", .i < l l i‘t'li .~..;: ,. ,__ ‘l ills _‘z-ll, li li 2; r is ills* §‘V:‘.l‘i _»~. -I1- itil; l is §',§;:’} ;';;§f ,_ _..-__ ._ ~ .:_ss-- - Fig. -.4 »§ 1 ,I 'tl -- iii 'f 4 I liiii ‘ ;. .tr .,\. _ _ > _ tg,- H I il » .~_. .f-..... 4|- '-1 ‘ _._-;_ If _ ? vp i¢`__-I lf- . I 'Silt _;=._l;_2 251.' ._ _-_; _ y_l§l 3. H, fir . ..<~¢.. _E32- .- -t lf- _' ,. f _ = : in of-, il... uv ». ¢--1-;, 1-.fi it -_ < J Pt# I »i_ _ `ifi'; if lei” " ‘get 1 .si lil ~. rt. fill ,. in . 1; _’_ M ._ .rt _ ,- _'-111 ._-. » f ~.._ /~< l N <4 *{.>;_.- ;.»,'_ Q. gt 1215. =il'}=’¢»~ _'Xl -,r ' 't 1,.'_i‘ 5f;i:l;-.- ; “-1. ?¢:§s‘rI- \ '--it :ffl lil ' \ /- il ' I fig :I fi -r smwznazzs §__,_3(;'_. -PAGE EIGHT mums sm me or-im THE cr-IARLo'r'rE'1‘owN GUARDIAN - wo-we ww- _ DECEMBER __18. 1913 _- !1l" \ I I I P Havana Cigars I/Ve have a lartse and very fine stock ot Havana cigars in b X.:s of 25 and 5»1nt1uding stv.-ral sizes In surlx brands as I Henry Clay Ot ro B ck St Co Diaz Garcia Roux-tu an-I Julitl. Carolinas Conchss Carolinas Ikrfectos Blagniiicos also Domestic Brands | Marguerite _ I Miritan I Metropole Lords of C-nada NoI?I8‘11nli llxvis Perfection Sir \VtlliaIns efc, .l. G. Jamieson DRUGGIST _" .19 fi;-» __ 1( ' § I ,_ .. ”’tl 7// / \ 1”-~. _ __ 2'; “H-. -. 6 _ 91. ' TI I » ‘. . ~ Fo. Price 2.50 up f ‘ Everyone bought of us put in aneat leather (.`3S£‘» G, ii_ Taylor jcweller 8: Opflcian If-T € 2;-§g.. 2'-if 5 -»° wa 1. Montague Black Fox Ex ch angc Correspondence Sollcltcd L. M. McKinnon, Manager I Montague, P. E. L .__.._. * IIIRRIIICES ' COLES- SAUNDERS.-At Chur- lottntown on Dec. 10th, 1913, by Rev. 'l‘homas Marshall, Mr. George Elmer Coles of Milton to Miss Mili- cent May Huundcrs of Winsloe. l~_ "l""' r DEATHS ‘___ Y W _ SMITH-In this city Wednesday, Dec. I7, 1913, at her humc 61 Chestnut St., _Miss Josie Smith, aged 20 years. Funeral notice later. l.UKTON.- At 34 Cobden St. Rox- bury, Mass., on December 4th, 1913, Willian- G. Luxton, aged 40 years, son of George and Mrs. Luxton, Cnr- leton, West, P. E_ I. ' MCINNIS.-The death occurred at ftoseberry on Monday, Dec. 15. 1913 of Allan Mclnnis, age 72. The lan funeral takes place 'Thursday at 2 on the arrival of his son and two daughters who arrived in Charlotte- lnst nigh't from Boston. r ____;____.i. HORRIHLE MURDER IN LONDON CITY. LONDON, Dec. 17-A world wide hunt for George Sumner. has been begun by thc police. Ha is wanted I in connection with the murder of Christie Bradfield, sister of tzlivcr Pool, manufacturer. The body was mutilated, tied in and thrown s ship She was 38 years and was in har brother'a when were _ employed. also for him. As in wireless III __,~,» living 5,3, which Alvsrtaslnj Phono ......_......... _..-D2 3 Slflsflsllln Phone _............... .....lJ}~1 News and Edit. fa; hum _....... .|51 News sltdllila I \ Phoncs..|§1 C |53 3 Head Office 'it Charlottetown Q Branch Ufficss at Bumlnarslds Atherton. Bourln, and Montague. " DIIRV 0F EVENTS 'l‘O~DA\'. (‘ity Magistrate's Court, 9 a. m. P. E. I. Poultry Show continues. St. Ellzabeth's Lord's Aid Yule "rice rea, Market Hsu, 5 p. rn. t-lpccial meeting, Frincc Albert Black Fox Co., 8 p. m. Kirmoss, Opera House. 8 p. m. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1913 LIVIIIG EXPENSES Theoretlcally and officially the cost of living in Canada today, compared with that of a year ago, according to statistics just Published, is as 138.1 to 136.6. That is, bills for or- dinary living expenses which. would ‘be receipted today for $138.40 could ,have been settled a year ago for $136.60. Twenty~five or thirty years ago most. ol the items which today make np the $138.40 could not have been bought at all, and the remaining ones, with which we were quite satis- fied, could probably have been bought for half the amount. So has the cost of living gone up but it will generally be admitted that living today is worth at least 100 per cent. more than it wus' a quarter of a century ago, and few would care to go back even to save the addi- tional expense. Official investigations have been and will be held to flnd out the cause of the extra cost, and the re- sult so fur has been, and. we an- ticipate, shall be, that the cost of living is still going up. Tarids, transportation companies, combines, trusts, &c., will be accused 'of un- duly inflating prices and many wise things will he said about the greed of certain individuals and corpora- tions, but prices will continue to smile at the inslnuations-and to go up. The man with the goods will ask his price and his customer will pay it or go without the goods. If there is an over abundance of this have them on hand and are anxious to get clear of them, the customer will probably be treated with a lit- tle more courtesy and may even be ofiered a liberal discount, but if there is n greater demand for the goods than the suDply is likely to mect then there will be no discount and the customer will pay the price or go without. Ask the manufacturer or the farm- er why he wants the duty removed. Is it to enable him to sell his goods cheaper by the amount of the duty removed? Not 1, bit of _it. What is the farmer’s hope with reference to the free entry of potatoes into the United States? Is it not that he muy get so much more for his potatoes? And will he not get it if he can? The consumer, possibly, may have indul- ged the hope that, with the duty and any other incidental‘costs removed, he would receive some btneflt but he usually finds that the bcueflt has been absorbed somewhere in transit. The increased cost of living arises from the fact, first, that everybody who has anything to sell demands for it all that be can possibly get for it, and he gets it if somebody else cannot supply it cheaper. Prices are not regulated by the cost of pro- duction but by the greed of the sell- er and the need of the buyer. We have seen, for instance, in this pro- vince fnrmers selling their potatoes at 75 cents a bushel and accepting the price without a. shadow of re- gret for the poor consumer who would be obliged to buy them later for $1.50. We have even seen a farmer haul his load of potatoes hack home because hc could not get 80 cents a bushel for it, a price which had been paid the previous day to a neighbor, And all this when it did not cost any more to produce those potatoes than it docs when they are bringing only Z5 cents in the market. It only emphasizes the truth of this theory when we add that this same farmer was, latf cr, obliged to dump his' potatoes be- If we could eliminate greed, if we luxuries and the extras, if we could content ourselves with n reasonable lf we could content ourselves with particular kind of goods, if others- T H E G OU A R_D I A N LIBEIIIILS IIID IIDEPEIIUEIICF In thc current issue of _thc Univer- sity Magazine, thc able Editor, Dr. McPhsil, has n strilf.-lug article on the future of Liberalism in Canada, under the heading of “The Hill of Error." Like the Pilgrim in n strange land, he says, a party may mount the slow Hill of Error in ignorance of its changed destination, without re- specting that the gently rising path- way leads only to the break of the preclpice at whose base are strewn the remains of parties which “con- tinue to this day unburied for an example to others to take heed how they scramble too fsr astray." In practical illustration of this alle- gory, Dr. McPhail refers to the fate of the Republican Party in the Unit- ed States, because it took the wrong turning towards a higher 'tariil four years ago; and to the Conservative Party in England, which, he says, is wandering in the wilderness be- cause it chose to follow a business man from Birmingham in the path of tarlfl reform. There is a large number of educated and able men in England, be says, who find them- selves in profound disagreement with the Liberal Government, and their natural place is in the Conservative Party. Rightly or wrongly, however, (and for our part we think wrongly) they are persuaded that the com- mercial and social interests of the English people require the present fiscal policy. The result is that the Party in power have things pretty much their own- way, notwithstand- ing that in most other respects they have lost the confidence of the peo- Dlc. Applying the lesson to the present position the Liberal Party find them- selves in in Canada, Dr. McPhail pro- ceeds as follows: "The cry of the Liberals is for H“'10D0mY~'for sell-Government. Let them_be quite sure that that is real- ly what they mean, and what is im- plied therein. “The Naval Question is not the final question. When Canada has decided to build a navy nf its own, or to build a Canndinn wing of an Imperial navy, it has still to face the fact that it has no control over the issues which determine how the men and weapons called into being are to be used. We cannot spend millions on weapons of war and long- Contillllc to have no voice in the is- sues of peace and war. Whether we like it or not we are fast being -driv- en to recognize that we have not really acquired self government nn. til we have acquired the same re- sponsibility over the issues of pence and war as those acquired long since by the people of England, or by the people of the United States, or by thc people of Mexico. “Self government can he obtained in only one of two wnys, by organic union with the Empire, or by inde- pendence. These are the only alter- natives. All other proposals arc mere subterfuges for evading the issue. “Official Liberalism at the moment is averse from meddling ,in Imperial policy-it fs content to leave thc issue of life and death in other hands. That is the abnegation ol self government. But whenever the moment comes, as lt must come, that the Canadians will have to de- cide that they must share in the ‘control of the issues of peace and war, they will be faced by the gues- tion whether they are to face these issues jointly with the people of the United Kingdom, or whether they are to control them. separately... "Independence as the destiny of Canada is an arguable alternative, but the Liberals should be quite clear in their own mind that it is towards independence they are head- ing when they proclaim self-govern- ment as their creed, and organic nn, ity as their anathema. If they are not quite clear about it the elector- ate will inform them, for the elect- ors have s singular gift for reducing a complicated problem into very simple terms and revealing as by a lightening flash tendencies and im- plications which are hidden from the wise and prudent politicians." Dr. Mcl“hsil, ns the Candid Friend, Warns the Liberals that unless they RFB Prepared to be stampeded as they were two years ago, they had better mend their ways. It is easy to imagine, he declares, the fury cause the market "broke" in n with which U15 Dcople would tUl'n UP- Sourls; Miss A. Johnson, Peter’s few days' the price having gone be_ on a party, which in reality menaced Road; J. H. l-lane, Toronto; W. H. d h, h . their ancient loyalty. Hhycs. Hullful; F. B. Armour, Rock yo" I " “mn” °' t ° °°“’“'"’°"’ _ island; J. Winfield, I-mum. pocket. ___ __,,_._____ Posr omucn Nor QUEEN °°"'d 3°’ “’°"g Wm’ '°"°' °' *he IN Home RULE BILL. R. P. Ivnn-ray, Mt. stewart, Thus, Clls this Week to prepare 10|-'the next session of parliament has ‘decided to burying only the things we reafly ,mmm t I th h' need, if we could, in short, do many ¢|au¢ea¢:an13:.,m§ t;:?°Irl;;|a°lz1lttg'f hings that we don't want to do, ficc to the authority of the new Dub. and leave undone many things that Un Phfllhmcht. This clause has been we want t do the cost of livin °°""°lY ““°°“d by f-IN °DP0llt‘|0n o . 8 would 'bc n very much less serious smggn’ 'md “ML by '°d"“l ”°'“° tiring than it is. 'rho great trouble f,u|_ ' '" “ °°"° ' "'°"“°" °” "‘° ll tIl8¢ W0 WB" t0 UVG "N85" at Hhncsforth, fthcrefore, the post of- ; "low" price but we cannot do it. ||°°» Uh "I5 Um! and nav! Bhd thc We have meds thc conditions |0\‘°isn policy, will be under imperial 'Q control. °°m°l‘::' :ga :"1 th' "tn °°°t °‘ It is reported that the negotiations "7 ”' "I" "'"“"‘ bctwcm the sovcrnmnt and the or LONDON, December 16.-The cab. profit on the things we have to sell, met' which I9 holding several coun- oonscnoouocucossosns It will interest our readers to learn that Canon Simpson, of St. Pctcr's eighth year of service-hard work en- thusiasttcally performed-in the min. lstry. The Guardian congratulates lthe reverend gentleman on the circum- stance. - 1 DEATH OF CARDINAL RAMPQLLA. Rome. Dec. 17-The death or Car- dinal Rampolla, former Secretary of State, was very sudden. He was in Bt Peters yesterday, but later t-:ll indis- posed, and grew worse ln the night and died while the messenger was on his way to summon the Secretary and doctor. He was 70 years old. By many it was thought he w-as most likely to be the successor in case of the death of the present Pope. TO HELP ENTERTAIN. A fad party was R delightful enter- tainment glven recently by a popular hOBtcSB. Each guest was requested to wear an emblem of his or her fad. A woman who aspires to a literary car- cer wore a pen. Another whose hob- by is pretty hats wore n miniature hat suspended from a chain. The do- mestic faddist wore a toy stove around her neck, while another wo- man wore a picture of her baby. A church official who had undertaken the collection of the annual mission- ary appropriation, had pinned across the front of his coat the picture of e. mission station in China, and below it a typewritten request for funds. An artist wore a picture of a bun- galow on the mountainside and ex- plained that her ambition is to own one some day. The evening brought many surpris- es, for in the usual small talk ofthe occasional gathering wc do not learn the extent of our neigbbor's talents. One of thc guests asserted that the fad party brought out more delight- ful and interesting conversation than she had known at any affair for a long time. The plan is one which may be carried out by any hostess, no matter how limited -her facilities for entertaining may he. A poverty social is fun. Write your invitations on wrapping paper and put them in the cheapest envelopes you can find. Ask your guests to wear their oldest clothes, and ofler prizes for those who are dressed tble poorest. Play old-fashioned games, serve the refreshments in the. kitchen. Use a kitchen table with an oilcloth covering. Light the room with can- dles stuck in carrots and DOI-HECEIL Have benches, boxes and peach bas- kets for the seats. For a centerpiece nge half n pumpkin filled with fruit. Serve sandwiches, -peanuts, pickles, ginger and sugar cookies, popcorn, apples, pears and other fruit. Progressive conversations are high- ly entertaining. Cards should be pre- pared with a list of subjects, such as “Should the Weather Be Tabooed Ag B, Topic of Conversation?" "Do You Prefer the Mountains nr the Sen- chore, and Why?" “Which is thc Greater Education, Reading or Trn- able of Expressing Emotions?" The gcntlemen's cards should he ls.r€0\‘ than those of the ladies, and each pair, large and small, should bear the same number. They should be distributed haphaz- ard, and the lady and gentleman hav- ing the same number are matched for the first topic of conversation. For a fixed time, say_ five minutes, the first topic is to be discussed. Then, at a signal. the gentlemen move on one place, leaving the ladies seated as they were. Thus each topic is dis- cussed until the list is completed. At the close the gentlemen decide by mt.. who wss the best talker among the ladies, and the ladies do the same for the gentlemen. Have ~a prize that the victorious pair can share togeth- er, n small dish of bonbons would 'lo--Evening Wisconsin. '1°°l‘°I"B'*Z°¢°°Zv*2°°2°'Z‘°I°'Z*°2°°Z‘*3°’1°'°¢*:f’:‘f‘:”1‘ i Horst itnnivlus - §oocooc»c-:-cccoococcecoii REVERE A. J. Reddy and wife, Montreal; Frank Simpson, Hamilton; George Riley, Malpeque; Jas. Cousins, Bal- tic; R. J. Crafer, Mulpoque; R. B. Ross, W. W. Masters, Boston; J. W. Regan, Fredericton, N. B.; Ed. Pye, Ottawa; S. T. Gallant, Piusvllle; Rodk. McKay, Bradalhnue; H. Mc- Phee, Bt. Dunstan’s College; G. J. McDonald, Cardigan; A. S. Palmer, Coleman; M. A. -Morrison, Dundas; A. B. McDonald, Vernon; Rev. R. `J. Macdonald, Baltic; Wm. Gillis, Pis- qnid; W. B. Truwsdale, Crapaud; J. R. Shank, Glace Bay, C. B. VICTORIA R. J. McDonald, St. Peters; John McLean, Sourls; A. E- and Mrs. Arsc. nault, Summerside; R. J. Crater, G, Riley, J- Cousins, Malpeque; J. A, McDonald, Cardigan; A. L Fraser, McNutt, Malpcquc; H. V. DcRochc, Miscouche; Geo. Molntyrc, Montague; W. S. Miller, St. John; R. T. Taylor, Moncton; E. L. and Mrs. Arscnault, Long River; J. B. Gaudet, Mlscoucho; A. F. McQuaid, Bouris; W. H. Towns- hand, Rollo Bay; W. T. Anderson, Morell; H. B. DcRochcllc. Miscouche. ::If he is a smolrer you nccd to come here for his gift. Cigars, Cign- rettes, cigar holders, tobacco pouch- es, smoking tobsccos, cigar lighters, pipes, etc. We have one of the most exclusive and bcst displays in thc city today and know that for qusl. tty and price the line cannot ho ax- Church, today completes his"`t`w§it`y-` `Ii\iif'5£ii';'5‘f'°»5f56»5iéf` '.r:::=.i::r is... _| Pino noni - attains In ~ mnhnnss by W.; wuaart . ll --wana vou-n naar Is noun. when y°n'v¢ done your work as Wcll as you can And your past is clean and your conscience clear, _ When you know you Ilsvell Y- wronged any mail. Whcn you’ve made no foe to be fac- ed wlth fear, The busy world may still inclined ` To deny rewards you have longed to claim, But it cannot rob you of peace 0! mind Or bring to your cheek the blush of shame. _ And the world, however it may con- nive ’t‘o keep you down and to hold YO" back. Must respect the hopes that you keep alive. Though its praise may _l3_t0r the gifts you lack, And the scorn on the lips of the rich- est man Is not a thing you have cause to fear, When you'vc done your work as well as you can And your past is clean and your - conscience clear. 1;; ..- _ RADIU-M BANK FOR USE IN CANCER CURE PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 16.-Stlmu- ills has been given to the movement for a radium bank In this city by the announcementlast night by Dr. How- ard A. Kelley, of Johns Hopkins uni- versity and Dr. Robert Abbe, of New 'Yoi~k, that the word euro cannot now property be applied' to the radium treatment of cancel. Dr. Kelley ex- hibited photographs of patients be- fore aud after being cured, and told of the cure in forty-eight hours Oi a man suffering from malignant cancer- ous growths on the face and head. The physicians were careful to state that the cure can at present be ap- plied only to superficial caI\C€l‘ iu itil early stages.` What the mysterious element may accomplish in n,dvnnced -_ind internal cases is s. matter 101’ further experiment, they said. ASKED FUR DETAILS OF GEIl.lilAN MISSION. COl\'S'I`ANTINOl‘LE, Dec. 16.- The 'rand vizier today replied to thc ‘ m‘hnssadors of Great Britain, France and ltussiu, with' respect to the Ger- man rrilitary mission, which is to tulw up the reorganization of the Ot- toman army. The ambassadors had dnrandca that the grand vizier put in writing the precise details of the role to bc assumed by the nation. The igmnd vizier now replies that the du- ties ul the mission will be purely technical and declares that they will have no authority over the Darda- hotle sand Bosphorous forts. _ g __ __ _._. n . -a. ::FOR YOUR Xmas chocolates and. confectionery in “Moirs Best," all fruits in season, Xmas booklets, pos- tnls, toys, perfumes and fresh grocer- ics, call ut H. R. Profitt, Vi0t0l`iB- 3392-12-17M2i. t #_ '_' ' ` 7 nucr /wo crivrs 1; V Pos'/' For/1: cr:.v1's ` THE Christmas Number OF THE Charlottetown - Guardian Will be Published on ` 22nd DECEMBER 'it wlllrontain, among other lubrestiug Features- 'tht Lina .lf th. wma"- Csfpitaf Stuck Issued ‘ - ` I Q 72,0- 0 coma ra ur. rubxr¢__2o_i__ahLia_sioo_mb- AUUOES ' _ Six Foxes lllqhest Grade Class A. 'Pure island Bred_Si|ver Black Pdlgreed Foxes ‘ Directors ' I Frank R. llcartz. President Local director of the Canadian Bank of Commercg Member advlsonB »ard of Dominion 'l`r`u-It CJ on “u ,__,,. L c-l Director Eastern A W Weeks, Charlottetown Trcmain. M. I’ Windsor Longworth. Charlottetown Trust C :_ (api 'l` G Taylor, Charlottetown _ Agent Marine and Fisheries for P E I, _ Bankers and References Bank of Nova Scotia Description Female No I. born l9|| Mother 6 Pups |9I3 This fox is the celebrated Dal- ton bted Vixen - “Bluebird" mother 6 pups in 19:3 (an even 3 pairs) which were sold and delivered in Octoter for (Forty Six Thousand Dollars) cash which we believe lobe the record cash value for any litter of pups On P. E. Island in One Season, Female No 2 Born l9|l This female as a high Ernde fox born in the ranch of F. F. 'l`uplin from his best pure bred Island stock and had a litter of 5 pups in |913 a very high per- centnge- Female No 3'Born l9|3 This young breed- r is a choice highly bred Oulton fox and is a grand dangh‘er and udescetdent of the foxes whose pelts sold for record piise in |9|o, and is nrel- atlve of our male Prince Royal, ‘ The pedigrees- of the above of the President. ’l`ne Company stock tothe public of which It of Fa-xes ' Male No I. Born l9|l This fox was littered in the ranch of F. F 'l`uplln,~New An. nan. from his highest grade of pare Island stock Male No 2, Born I9I| “Prince Royal" This cho'ce male fox was littered in the ranch of R. T, Oalton at Albertou and issame blood and family that produced the pelts which sold in the Lon- don market at £500, £530, £540 sterling ani he is considered one of the finest foxes In P. E. Is- land both as regards pedigree and quality of *he fox himself. Male No 3, Born I9l| This mule was littered in the ranch of F.F Tuplln, New An- n=.n, from his highest grade pure Island stock. Foxescan be seen at the office are culy cffering zoo shares of considerable amount ls already spoken for and they expect the small balance will be quickly subscrlbsd for in view of the showing made in the past by the two old breeders 'I he Directors have already had several good t tiers for 11314 Opflons"ns'the' quality sal bretdlug of' these foxes make them sought fir by new ranching compsnies_Thc E-rttmfed dividend for roi.; I4 Hop c. ' For allinfirnrrttion and prospectus tipply to ’ -- MAJOR CHARLES LEIGII, Secy Q. Treas, 1 P. O, Box 255, Ciarlottet Iwu, P F. I. Application for stock in the Prince Royal Black Foxes Ltd. I or we hereby apply for. . _ stares or atoo each si the capml Stock of the Prince Royal Black Foxes Ltd and agree to make the folowlug psymen ta 20 per cout with application li0 “ ‘ on Jtury I5. l9I{ 50 ‘ ‘ on March I5. li)l4 To Major Charles Leigh.Secy & Treas { A mount enclosed P O. Box 255, Charlottetown, P, E. I. ` 3356-12. ISM. t ’ 7 ' -af" ii Favorite "I have no family pbyslcia my Ilfe.” ‘ take care of your responsibilities. Provincial Manager "My grandmother died at age 122.” “I have all the insurance that I need,” “I think I will carry my own risk for a whiIc.’_’ “My Fraternal Insurance ls much cheaper and just as safe. Do you cheat yourself with these poor arguments? IF SO. you had better turn over a new leaf and let The CANADA LIFE, W- K- Rovers. :_ =.. “.rf.as.'=:»r.z~ Fiction: n, never c*nsulted_s doctor in Ajanta. ful tilver Black Fox Four Page Illustrated article. Four Pages of Illustrations of People and l'Iac¢a in P. F. I. Walf page reproduction of the Fathers of Confcdef.. - tion. Guests At Yule ‘ By E. L- Sleedmsn (hristmas Legends The Joys of Christmas Time i l’auIa’| Christmas ~ By Helen Ross Games for Christmas Christmas Trac at Wide Plains By W. D Nesbit Make a G handles made from best quality fectly_ Wouldn`tl Cased- Carvers For dad. mother or the house the gift of s set of cased car- veirs W°“|d be “ Piesem “mul 365 dtlvs every ye~r and one that W ii be 'hmkfullv fesflved and gratefully remembered ` You will find here a spl nil.; une of cazversiu horn, bone. wooden sod ivory -`"°'='» highly tfmperel and grouui, at 3 price that will sni yarn- p,¢|,¢¢ y,0°`k P", ‘ Ctll in and look over the display, ood Gift ? /‘“\| Z sutriod i, “ \“~_r~ ' /9,. I I AA, i ' im Fennel) fd’ Chandler I Victoria Row llomo for Christmas Christmas Romance F llcr Christmas Gift appointment. Q c a de q 'ull "GBIC Illlgtnhgigxrldr 'Ources for cspeglisllly Ord" any ‘U Prevent D|s_ hon" wmlor ice ra:::::,, angulgmid ing of horsemen will hehsld curl! ill ,ho '¥’°°‘I a aa' lied. 0 tl _ - cc all ln sn wc will help you. _ Mu". |,,,|-tm ,rom Ammm have "mm to °“" "““|» P" if l'°li¢t,0¢ 0°! "‘° U_\l_“* difficulty. is SLI; I?;m“a:t'9rcsTt|°G¢“o‘r°¢??s‘dn gazst f;';;“°1“l:m:hi:”|5ovincc with s view date should cation ho y progress. ysts. _ lil.-‘ V J , Prospects for 'mar in condition for n or- ruu rnosrscrs ron Ion Racine. There is ng pl-"mt un |06-l‘l°lnl in this Island orc the brtlhtcat in rcccnt years. It is ex- pected that between $600 and S800 Dunes will be hung up, for the rsr- ious class races this season. A meet; January to organise n _'sp_¢sdaway_ club and prepare for the wtntcfcsm- Plirll. Every ow-an ot aspect! candi- rn uld find ready pu;-¢||”°" swam, . 2; ‘ii ii- dcx-tomskctlissr __ _ ._ . -./' ,|€_’ - , >, » . _ 7-_ ._ -,,.=2-~_ »` '~.;~ - - _ v _ ' - 5- W .___ gf- na, ,-. -"lf, ..,, g _ ., ;,. _ .\ , _ > \ ` _ _ _ _ . -- Ji., __|xt,¢_-.-- '-lt ;-V ,-_;,.~_ _;. 'lu--' .. - _-f _ 1 - _ 1 _ .- ' _ ‘ _ r 1 1