Advertisements 00' . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 1M nor line ol 5 wuril . Ir n" lluo of Lworsll‘ In per llno of l word! ‘Io no: lino of I Ioldl a 9W 3 - ‘e Help Wanted Boarders Wanted ' Apply Parker Rouse ‘gull boy and do house lain-owes. 17 Villa Ave, fl; . For Sale roll. saw-A raw Will. Herbert Mason. Bunbury. - l02l-l2-28-3i lfoiclts. Wanted hind, fix-air the village. " slur. in spring. "H" Guardian Articles ‘For Sale 200d rcniifii- Apply 192 street. 1n first class condition. Apply J. h‘. Farrar. Appin Road. 1007-12-28-31 while at anchor. > a " ‘Notice store of the late Norman J. Mc- than January 15th, 1929. All 8K3- collection. . CATHERINE D. MCDONALD, / wil- i: h, 7"'%>Ii. ._i ' t? . 1244/. ’ FROM SAINT JOHN, N. B To (iherlmurg-Southa i .I'u.n.2|.l'eb. 2i . . . . Mel! Man“. April l1 .. Jvletagama Mania . . . . . . . . . .........Montcalm ToGIasgow-Llvorpool Jon. bithnl Montelarc Ian. ILFQbJUA...“ Metagama ,,.~v-~\ ~ w. Will-lit! buying A and 8-12-1143‘ WANTID IMMEDIATELY AN EX- pericnoed maid for general house- work. 800d wages. Apply Mrs. W. or phone QMI-lZ-Thli Canadian National. Apply; WEI-to hos!- sound and free from; holes. Price reasonable. Write 51 W. Simone, 5 Gottingen 8t. Haliq 1033-13-39-31. JNQ -w“NTEn_'\ SMALL PLACFLPEH; envelopes with address printed.) " 5- i l0l-l-l2-28-ii; Jqb p,.,,,,e,.y_ “'.“\NTED—A FEW HIGH CLASS‘ . silver fox polis. quality (mos only! n. s. McLean. c-o McLean 0d,! ' f Ltd. Charlottetown, P. E. I. ' . 1012-12-28-3! " l l FOR. FALE-BABY CARRIAGE IN: Kept. l042-l2-39-3i. FOR sALh-A souusc; ouTl-"rrfl - M‘ one: axraarsncinosnnaas sccoiuonsran. -; Convenient to college, " om-u-ao-u, warren - any sol iooo-u-za-ei g Atnln - GIRL To calm F03‘ r5. App- . lrmiardian office. aeae-lz-n-tf; Aural: s-r ONCE dlIIDDLE located. Apply Guardian. 998l-12-27-4i Teachers Wanted TEACHER WANTED FOB SPRING} Hill School to begin Jan. 3. Good; supplement. Embleton Murray; i secy. 1060-12-31-11‘ . Lost lnosr-m STRAND rues-ms: . or between 38 Grafton Street. by. way of Post Office. handbag con- taining sum of money and keys. Finder please leave at 3B Grafton Street and receive reward. I 1025-12-29-21. . Miscellaneous SHIPPING TAGS. EXPEDITIOUS. ly supplied. Guardian Job Pruitt’- ery. ' .5 ion sane - rim rnousiumjnnbflfljixlm" “Ajimoumqma cream and keeping. the grease on for an hour or more. After the hands cards at shortest notice.“ Guard- » up Job Printery. ‘ i ALFRED MACDONALD, i , Land Surveyor, HennanviileJ i P. E. I. 9l36-ll-17-lm0J l CORRESPONDENCE CARDS AND l l Just the thing for acknowldge- ment. intimations. etcJ. Guardian l , . GABBY GERTI E‘ , Milady Beautiful ‘lioooowoooo-ooo-ooooooooowo Centrally. . lzivray from the corners and the fin- ipcinted form. i Hangnails that are tears in the ‘skin carelessly or pres-sins it 40W" i \ . a , ~ 1 _ B! LOIS LIRDH .1 SOFPENING “uAan concurs The hard cuticle that forms a- ‘ruund the outer corners of the fin- sernalls is a common beauty prob- lem. Some people try to solve it by cutting the cuticle, but such treat- ment only makes the condition worse; the skin becomes hornier and more ragged. There are" cases, of course. when the scissors or nippers must be used to clear away jagged bits of skin. but it is a mlstak to make a practice of cuting am ’ the nails. ‘File hard corners respond quickly to proper treatment. which consists in applying vaseline. oil or skin have been creamed or oiled. gloves may be worn to keep the softening application from rubbing off. It is a good plan to saturate small pieces of clean absorbent cotton with warm olive oil. wind them around the fin- ger tips and then draw on the gloves. The longer the oil is left on the bet- ter but when only a short time is available for treating the hard cut- icle, a marked improvement may be obtained by using the oiled cotton for fifteenor twenty minutes. Hard lumps of skin at the confers of the nails often come as the result hf failure to file the corners of the nails round. When they "are left square the surrounding flesh presses against them and becomes ca“ or horny. When the nails are filed th ecuticle should be pressed gently gear-tips in this way molded in a more cuticle around the base and sides of the nail may be due to cutting the ed ctte." Piper. Richardson o1 the 16th Members of the new Slngaporci Flying Club in the Straits Settle-i menm are bemoanlng the loss of‘ their first seaplane which sank‘ . tvhen it is dry. The only time when ' the cuticle should be. pressed 8911117 i ls after the fingers have been sack- iing in warm water or after a cut- icle. softener. The skin may then be loosened gently with the flat end of the orangewood stick. This process ‘she-hid not be at all painful- ! There are. however. rare indivi- miuals whose cuticle is extrelnly sen- 4 ‘ All persons indebted to the estato _ of Nonnan J. McDonald must maki: - lllyment of their accounts at th- Danald at Grand ‘rracadie or at the office of Jdacbonald d: MacPhee. Solicitors, Charlottetown. not later a counts remaining unpaid on saidi _ _ date will be banded to Solicitor for .~ Adminlstratrix ill 1H i 1 l "When you threaten to smack sf [man's face. he's apt to hold ycui ~ to it." . i . wary effort should be made to avoid ;5.h(;\fld be applied at once. A little hitch" powders Sllllllt-‘lldw m‘ m lhour, the performance in a P sitive and tears easily. In 8110b 09895 bruising or breaking the skin. blll- should this occur in spite o! all pre- cautions a germicide such as iodin¢ clean absorbent cotton should 0e placed over the wound and fastened down with adhesive tape or medl- (‘ill/Ed collodion to afford protection fol‘ the sore spot until it peglns l9 heal. ‘ Tear Bomb Causes Riot (By Britlsh-‘United Press) B , Dec. 28.—-A discharge o! “stink" and "tear" bombs from be- iilrid a pan-use 01 "m" “d Hpmb of B l"! house at umlspllilpmy which deals "The C. CAUSE 0F AFFINITY than is usual. even in ‘rgggfnpffiiywitb the aberrations of ‘ egene . Theplecehasbeendllmilnmay stages without arouslll! “m” e protest, and four presentations at Hamburg passed oi! ql-llto Dewllflb‘ lly. But there the calm was that ‘which pi cedes s 800ml- ' A riotous scene was us anized and carried out ‘by a part? Wh° h“ {packed the cheaper seats ‘ of the ‘theatre with their youns ‘braves- It was made clear that the disturb- ance was organized, for the first act was not interfered with. The mo- ment the curtain rose for the sec- "Every follow around here seems to consider Min Rich his affinity." "Yes: she's very wealthy." bwkb law- Ynuna media the" in back seats, hurled wimp,» Ollwlilllltllenndvfntbthgfigm handles-chin!!- ‘ ' ‘ . Meanwhile the manager hurried to the footlishts and implored the riot-l v in the name of justice, not in, vent on the innocent actors their, 166111185. towards the play. His ap-| penis, however, re‘ in vain. | a few police on from the local‘ station who were quickly on the! scene were powerless. The rioters re- fused to obey their orders, and were,' ch they managed to clear the‘ auditorium of the most obstreperous, the box-office to repay them the Y cost of their tickets. waited outside. the theatre to the end of the play’ and mobbed those leaving the build-l ing. Not until the police had charg- ed again with their batons was the exit from the theatre clearedg The Piper of l A Coiircelettél Continuing i: piatllslllflllvcellfrlflfé ti series o or cesfioll Elsfillrlfilllllld who _won the Victoria Cross during the Great War. W. W. Murray, in the December 15th issue of MacLeaws vividly describesnthe, exploits of “The Piper o! 0011M‘- Battalion. Canadian Scottish. 11ml of a dashing cavalryman. 131w?- F- M. W. Harvey. a trooP-lfifl-llel‘ m, Lord Btrathcomiis Horse. ‘ "A generation now getting along in years may. recall with little dif- ‘ficulty an epic of the hill-fighting on the North West Frontier ofolin- dia about thirty years ago. Dash- ing up the slopes ,of Dargla. the Gordon Highlanders routed the trib- esmen. with the strains of the pib- roch ringing in their ears. Piper Findlater, the ‘Cock o’ the North’ charge until he was w-unded in both legs. But propping himself be- tween the boulders. the indemnit- able Scot continued to play the reg- imental march of the Gordons until the Highlanders had swept the-en- emy from the hill. For» this Find- later was awarded the Victoria Cross. “The Great War furnished an ep- isode, similar in its ‘chief particu- lars wherein the principal figure was Piper Richardson of the 16th. Battalion. Canadian Scottish. Its venue was the ill-omened Regina Trench. and the occasio was the attempt on the part of the 3rd Can- adian Infantry Brigade to storm the position, nearly a month after the capture of Cuurcelette. "The Regina ‘french was situat- ed Just over the reverse slope of a. 1on3 ridge which overlooks Cource- lette from the north—a fact that was chiefly responsible for the cost; l? failure of the several assaults launched against it. Observation of the artillery effect upon the bar- bed-wire ntanglements were diffi- cult. From time to time gunfire of the utmost intensity was laid down on them. and according to all de- ductions these obstacles should have been pulverised. But they were not. When the 16th Battalion. operating livered their" attack on the Regina Trench ln the pitch darkness of the morning of October 8. they found cf wire which the shells had graced were massed the German infantry who raked the advancing Highland- ers with a merciless fire. The at- tsc waves were cut to PlOCQS. " Flight found the battalion rendered desperate by their aborat. ond time. however. pandemonium lvaleflorts to reach the enemy, HAD se-rrzn move on “Y the terrific toll of vyon m0 dead. and striving. to forora way Admirer: I've heard you are some terpalchorean. Ballet Dancer (angrily): you're going to eall names, better move on. Say, If you'd i l 1 I l i t Queen Hotel 'Sinoo taking over this Hotel we have III!‘ m" of dollars In 11mg,“ [gum]! d0 “U01; $11: Sim-sum‘ “gl-Tu“ > nor m masseuse: can $3,"; “m” " ' “N wu- (sticking hold out a book‘ ‘ u.“ gate): Was my husband out hare‘ > h: mm ,u'”" w "d". i: ‘KW-f . - P" " ' = \ = H when’! rank‘?! In l . A ar ottetown 1 Hotel Co" Ltd. ,A PNFWII " mes a. aeolian. l I through what m wire. with theulvfillgts ted m the lieaden sheets from the trench \ in ron. But the dauntless spirit of Findlater hovered over the can“- "m 5°°'-I- Piper James Richardson m" "Milled in all the glorious ti-g. tions of his Celtic anoestry- 5nd he knew that nothing could inspire the Highlanders so much as the Emmi music of the pibroeh, 1;, maAAAl a ‘ ‘ l Mkrfui inhalant m flkkhnihflflluloflloulh‘ rmaiacsswimmwgi troubles. ‘ Kdroportwoenyoar. hill -- llllfl Iii-III‘ at. y, new . . . ‘mall tn 4 ’ ' f: i s. i..“i’§?€-i‘t“;»'l.i1l“."§f."~"l.i5; heads drum audience below i" ' mrrliiorlf i927 by T ' unssavics m bOBBS-MERRILL co. I THE STORY ‘think you would be afraid to stay on » i ~ -'alone. Especially after your experi- ‘PTQSBCQ hard against her window enoes here. ‘Was it in this room you we strolls to be elected by force-Ion the eastern side. the side of the saw chi. llgbfA-that night aftsr you But appeals- for reinforoementsyor-zgg, 3119,53“; it 533111, ' ' bwusht up from the police howl-yellow parchment with the sesmedl J-‘Yes, quarters a flylns squad on blcyclesgccci- beneath the atlas eves.‘ As there." and by the liberal use of their tfllllfghe looked 1t; jaded away into the darkness from which it bad come.‘ with its disappearanceoame aud- lleflrly 300 persons being ejected. den activity. anger. The expelled anti-Semitics. after, she ran to the window and flung making fruitless attempts to induce it wide. ered the blinds. Gay had a pistol, a l--- dsome; ed one, which ‘thatmemroable year abr 0f her vonuu me visits drawer and looked at it. "Your're a useless old thing," shei said impatiently. "why don't r10" 8° that face. of found the body lathe cove?" ' that hand? Stretched ou " I came up in the morning, the sketch was gone. It was here, in this - _ drawer." She lightly pulled out the "HCjllO," Bbd 03.1105. "HEllO b11011!" drgwer 0f ghg dggh Her plgtol, buil- There was no answer to her will. nesslike, important.’ lay in full sight. but staring intently. she saw among. "n; was here and the next moming the shadows of the wood one shadow 1t; was gone. So" I: lmew the poor that moved silently farther intothe dam- w-mhed to be 1.31;,‘ m peace and‘ ' recesses of the fbrest, and merged atflmdiggurbedg- g ’ last into black. She closed the win-; dow thoughtfully. locked it and loW- {stand On end. And after all that éstay on here. alone, unp . Erlmm it W“ helfiwould not harm me." pleasant conceit to keepit lcadedg He alnlhd and dropped the subject. well conditioned, ready for emer- g He gglfl he had come to Portland. on Q3116? 1B9 lll drflwel‘ 0f he! dell! llflrlbusinees. and had come to the ls- at hand. She had bought it during 18nd Wm, only p, (aim, hgpe that he 094i °11 m" might find her. or,‘ falling to find her w 151N011!» m hei- address in the city. He nawnshops. and with a sort of boy-hand he could not bear to drop the ish vanity had carried it with her m“, wquagnggflgggmp, which co ever since. But it is indicative of him m.‘ proved so swggfly ghflfln- absolute confidence of her nature . - . . that, in an emergency she always en- tirely forgot the weapon. revertins to the more a feminine defence of ‘ screaming, calling or locking dwrsvlpine. . ». v . When she saw the yellow face at - a“ waited ab,“ m- awhughop- her window she did not $9 mum “Jug ‘still that Rand would come,but think of the boasted pistol. Which gginpily she went upstairs and kick- she affectionately dubbed the Baby-Md on ha; sflppgfg ygbhgy oi-osaly. until she was safe behind “is 1"" xwhen, a little later, she heard his ered bllnds- Th“ “hi? Wm“ theiquick knack on the door below, and his blithe whistle above caught up her. slippers in her hand iilfld ran downstairs, laughing. b9 19'? ‘ 121B. ' ingback to her as she stood in tht ‘lighted doorway. beneath the tall streaming from his bagpipes, led the you. and scare the Peepllli! Tmllsvi Expecting Rand. who came at his own caprice and kept her alert with light knock at her door. It was PH nine o'clock. oflwhen there is some occasion for .1..." m hum shard have been in expectation. She W“ 11°“ stmlledldctained. You are all right, are 70"? when. an hour later. the" w“ “tivcthing has happened-won haven't u as =- ' b t h“ mm always been anything unusual?" " - suited his convenience “if onlyliety beneath the lightness of his smiled tolerantly at his tardmess B5 v01“ She open-Ed the door. saw in the shad0W~ Pdonald Ingram. sh to a little: frlilhlfill she quickly apolvil lylaughtcr. pectin I am glld 1:0. Ingram suid with was no mixtaklnm would still be h out stsylllfl the not?" I wgs -quite lll. great deal of rest- with her feverish tuded ‘ mmfldfigag} the summer pfllillfir had received t rider's Wmllfll puny ‘over the tunity rades b e was ed r-v-y_ for which, iced with friend-‘m me_ woods new. yo,“ wmdqw"» scrt of spying. sneaking around. I But when she, not Rand. but‘ startled ill- "oh, you startled me. 1-! was ex- . “What luck to find “wen-yes-a, little. and “so havegone," he said slowly- ere. You are rather‘ summer, are W“! " Her face flushed, explanations, and . g some one else. Do come in.. gee you 88MB." 3 yguf’ ROllEld y p, warmth there i "I had no idea you i perhaps. Blltl I need-ob. B; her keenly l "I should he Commandlnfl 0f- on to P153’ h“ ' mp,’ and the Ollllilll" to fire the blood of his 00m" y the magic of the bsK-Dllles 00H! course nothlnsallos ” moneti- not? Or why?", ' started up co see- ran. Of with other units on both flanks, de- , -' hi there; wqgrgxeekllillrtiltaltltfian olnthe 16th ‘Bat- talion, gays thé 016M105» wu-dem‘ oralised for a moment. As 081m I: i; he had been on invade- "git sucked jauntly to the ‘side, c e0‘ thrown proudly out and ribbons themselves charging into a tangle but sllshtly- m the trench behind "l ition captured. l VAPURE.w'°'~i'»-‘~ heuleleorfngatonoo.’ m, | treamini Whlnll- “M” lardsgnpzstrtisde aloul 111 17°11‘ °I the wire amid an inferno of flre. He marched and counter marched up and down, unscratched. bear-ins l1 charmed life. playing his variations; and sending his shrill music into the air, shattered with the‘ roar and crash of battle. " ‘The effect was instantaneous.‘ declares the omciaf record. Inspired by his splendid example. thfl will“. pany rushed the wire with such fury and determination that the obstacle was overcomeand the Dos- "Later, after participating bombing operations he was m that window, right '.'And the ‘hand’! ‘Are you sure of \ "Of course I am sure. And when hair‘ u “By GeofQB. Yflu make my' “Oh, he was a gentle spirit. He Then he went quickly away. wav- lt. she “ohfgpcdw she cried. "A minute "I'd have-been earlier. but-I was Gay sensed m undertone of anx- “why, of course I'm all‘ fllllt-Q! "Well I saw a chap hanslns Bull"? who it was. and he I chased him. and the-two of ua have hot-footed it all DV-Zl‘ the island. He was alarms with me. Got me down to the city land- ing. and dropped me like hot. coke. You haven't-J.’ “Oh. that first have been the Ohi- namanl" "The chinamanl" Rand's amuse- ment was unbounded. “The Chim- manl What under heaven—" “Oh 1 must have told you about the Chlriaman," she said evasive- CONTINUED Canadian cavalryman fought a ser- ies of stlfl engagements with the enemy rearguarda. On the evening of March as. the Strathconas and the Flort Garry Horse had dismoun- ted and carried the villase of Eq- uancourt. northeast of Peronne at the point of the bayonet. and next day they pushed on toward Gwen- coiirt. their final obliective. Snow fell- heavlLy throughout the day and impeded operations until the early evening; but as soon as the storm had ceased. the Btrsthconas laun- ched thelrassault‘. ‘ "The regiment galloped ovoi- the ridge fronting Guycncourt. but were met by a raking machine-gun fire which came from strongly wired trenches. These they passed, not without casualti. and changed their direction to strlkmthe village to their right. In command of the leading troop was Lieut. Harvey. Galloping well in front of his men and close to the village. he noticed in the last. faint glimmer of day- light_a deep and well sited trench, to take back a wounded comrade and prisoners. ~ i i ll "After proceeding about I00 yards Piper Richardson remembered that he had left his pipes behind. Al- Oll fdl, f0 YQWVQl‘ onglyu ednottodoso/ P-VO-Qmgvv ’ insidious ._nERE;-.> Meehaii, Inc, of followinggyand purchase of all and . European-g ments and directlyathwsrt his _‘e of approach. Into this position were machine-gun. . "Almost without stopping his charger, l-farvey swung from the saddle and with the agility of an Olympic athletic hurdled the barb- ed wire and sprinted straight for the" enemy. The man behind the me:- chine-gun was his objective. and‘ true as a magnet he crashed in up-, on him and shot him dead.” ' . = nmmiaas romm n: WILLS~ 1 (By British United ators who make curious provisions which- their» eccentricity causesftd their executors and to beneficiaries; some pecularones have come to light such as the !0llt!wlf‘lg:—- A clause in a will creating a trust which was to continue for twenty veers after the death of the last lineal descendantsof Queen Victoria death was recently the simject of litigationln the inch com-s,» , A Yorkshire gardener bequest‘ one shilling and a cracked bowl to his wife. . Another amiable forgotten his marriage vows left his wife five shillings‘ to buy a rooe pounds. which he left his son ‘fwith, help the younger man m- op the roodtodestructionpfl The type ofwill wblchh for its object the discmnfitilrefof , star's relations is often plowed . England. but. in other countfles such elncies are illegal. . i .~.» A teststor in 1 to a fewyeers ago pubs number of Methodist min- isters into an ‘rhere is no more ardent potato-j itionist than the Methodist of the American Continent. and hurthe recipients disposed of theshares pt» large brewery concern which was to them has never transpired. Re also left to three imliflrtsnt opponents of racing in shares in the Ontario Jockey Club. the legatees being requests; to drag; the dividends a d exercise the other privileges of bership. on a petticoat. The Bupreme Court of Washington rejected a will by a clerk in the’ undeclpherabls and what was claimed to be.the will slate written by a medium. quested executors to, one shilling to buy haael nuts. .“ she has always preferred. crac mending ." Perhaps the worst of this . Mr. D. nMéefiipii p: v Nah Yo; frJmlgrl . . - will be interestjedin ‘the - our office Thursdd .and Red FoxPelts for prices i . confronted by a" mess of-entdn 15.1.,- tumbling Germans. setting up? a " ‘LONDON. December l in their wills are spared the trouble , living at the a time of the tasiatoi-‘af ‘man wholhad ‘p with yfhich to hang herself. I'll?!- wlrlch to go to the devil," wouldnot" There is a recordwofa taslistcr NW4"! wflting his will on a, door. another streets Treasury Department. which was so, " that rpm-imam , mediums were called in by relatives, 4 . _ ABritish B8110‘! ireamihiswifs. somewhat shlbbilyhwllen he n- L“ par her ‘ofpwvisionwaslthatofaliondoiiyr dllilcidays sited. States‘. "l-liighést‘ "~ Z\‘ l“ 3 ‘l? I f spouses . s- E ofthodudmanwasprodueedond