- v6.53 1-8. f . 15109 n. l Tdollar 59.17 cents; Canadian dollar ' ‘cents for a gain of ‘ ‘cents. PRODUCE ' 'Pl,'lnce Edward o T.4 , - l _ "1" , ,_ " ewYork Curb Miscel i s Market‘ ‘ - p. g Q I laneou s ‘At A ,,,__,,,,_,—--,,,,,, _ ""— Glance __. - "9"!" v "l" Jan. ‘It.’ ycmThfnu, (Csnsdiss mm lgyznull! w: Hue‘;- 118033 9:’; bani-gratis mLMonti-esl-mdus- pfiznunlmficamrsg flu r Pow (Canadian Press) _. MONTREAL. Jan. l5—British _~d_rld foreign exchange in relation " 'l:o the Canadian dollar as compil- ‘ ed by the Royal Bank of Canada ' " osed today as follows: ' entina peso .2707. tr Brazil milreis .0560. , China Hong Kong dollars .3262. Czechoslovakia crown .0417. France franc .0683. Germany “reichsmark .4047. , (Crreat Britain pound 4.9703. Holland florin .6832. Hungary pengo .2987. India rupee .8784. New Zealand pound 4.0150. _- Norway krone .2502. . iPoIand zloti .1899. South Africa pound_4.9461. Spain peseta .1375. . Switzerland fra-nc .3272. Sweden krone .2567. _. rUnited states dollar 1-92 per . rent premium. Closing exchange rates:- At Montreal-Pound 4.97 1-32; U. S. dollar 1.00 1-32; franc 6.63. rt New York-Pound 4.96 7-8; »Cansdian dollar 99 31-32; frsnc At Paris-Pound 74.95 fr; U. B. 4911'? 15-09 3-4: Canadian dollar In gold-Pound 12s, 1d; U, g, ‘S1109 cents. YORK, Jan. 15~—Foraign ‘exchange firm. Great Britain de- mand high 4.97 1-8; low 4.96 1-4: close 4.96 7-8; 60 day bills 4.95 5-8; France 6-63 l-B; Italy 8,04; 391- gium 16.95; Germany 40.36,- can- ads so ar-sz. Currencies. (Canadian Press) NEW YORK, Jan. ilk-led by the French franc, leading curren- cies scored impressive gains in terms of the United States dollar Lrgythe foreign exchange maflret to- 6-68 1-8 _ .01 1-8 of’ s cent. The Canadkn dollar closed up its discount from 3-32 to 1-32 P31‘ cent while the pound sterling,- k-finlshlng the day at $4.96 7-8, showed a gain oi half a. cent. MONTREAL. Jan iii-Pound sterling advanced 3-16 of s cent to $4.97 1-32 on Montreal foreign ex- changes today and the United States dollar was off 1-16 of one per cent to $1.00 1-32. The French flan: held unchanged st 6.63 .~.'I‘he franc closed at _ (Canadian Press) l- MONTREAL. Jan. 15—Bui;te1' prices eased slightly while other __l_ines held unchanged on Montreal open produce market today. TCarlots or less oi no 1 butter wire selling at 25 to 25 3-4 cents per pound while lots to retailers were 27 for solids and 28 for prints. Ontario colored cheese. no 1 grade, sold at 12 cents per pound. Graded egg rlpments in carlots brless were bringing 29 cents s dozen for A large, 26 to 27 for A- meflium, 24 to 25 for A pullets, 24 l-2 to 26 for B, and 2'3 1-2 for C. Potatoes were $1.40 to $1.45 for Island mountains and $1.25 to cz-m for cobblers, per (IO-pound bags. In eighty-pound bags, Prince Edward Island moun- Htsins were $1.25 to $1.30, cobblers $1,_20 to $1.25, New Brunswick: 8i.- “20 to $1.25, Quebec mountains $1.- 1cm $1.15 and Quebec no 2 whites l0 cents to $1. - ' Oats, feed no 1 36. Flour spring wheat firsts $5.!!- ’ Flour seconds $5.40. Flour bakers $5.30. Hour winter wheat choice $3.90. Hourywirite com $4.60. Branton $20.25. Shorts ton $21.25. Middlings ton $26.25. Rolled oats big 90 lbs $2.90- Hay no 2 per ton carlots $9.00. (\=rsse Ont col no 1 12. ‘ Butter no 1 25 to 25 3-4. Eggs in cartons A 1 large 42. Rigs A 1 medium 37 Eggs A 1 pullets 35. Eggs A large 37. Eggs A medium 32. Eggs B large 29. Eggs B medium 28 Eggs C 20. 90's P. E 1 mts $I.40-$1.45. 90's P E I cobbler-s 91.35-51.40. 80's P E I mts $1.25 to 81.30. 80's P E I cobblers $1.20 to $1.25. 80's N’ B mts $1.20 to $1.25. 80's Que mts $1.10 to $1.15. 80's Que white no 2 90 to $1.00. MONTREAL, Jan. 15—A weak tone ruled in heavy trading on the produce section of Canadian Com- modity Exchange today. Birttcr Spot-Sales: 1,100 boxes Que grass, 24 7-8; 500 boxes Que grass 25. Que (Dec. make) 24 5-8b. Cheese Spot-Ont white 10 3-4 to 11 1-2, col 11 1-2 lo 12 1-4. Eggs Spot-Sales 100 cases On- tario E large, 24 i-2. Ontario A- large 28 l-2 to 29 1-2. A medium» 26 to H. A pullets 24 to 25. C 24a. GRAIN (Cans-diam Press) WDINIPEG, Jan. lfa-Isst-min- ute selling. occasioned by late weaknas at Chicago, wiped out earlv advances on the Winnipeg Grain Exchange today and left wheat Prices 1-4 to 1-8 cent lower, May at 87 l-2, July 87 7-8 to 86 and October 86 7-8. Jractional gains built up by the largest one day's export sales oi Canadian wheat in more than a week, 750,000 bushels, were erased as former buyers turned sellers and futures closed at the day's bum-o. patents, lowest levels. ' Liverpool was strong, 1 1-2d higher at the close, but Chicago finished off 3-4 cent after holding fractional gains most of the day. Cash were quiet, but coarse grains prices were firm through- out in active trading. London Flocks To Ye Old Plow Inn LONDON, Jan. 15—United states Ambassador Itobert W. Bingham and Mrs. Bingham were among the hundreds of persons who flocked from London to watch lshbel Mac- Donald, daughter of Ramsay Mac- Donald, former prime minister and now lord president of the council, in action for the first time as prop- rietress of Ye Oldc Plow Inn in the heart oi the Buokinghamshire countryside. ' " The little village of Spoen hsd not known such excitement since Jubilee day, and because of the great influx of visitors the village police force-one strong-had to be mobilized soon after the inn open- ed to unravel the tangle oi auto- mobiles parked outside the 300-year old building. Throughout the day more and more cars came over the ‘ steep. winding lanes to where the red- bricked and timbsred inn lies in l. hollow among the Chilwrn Hills. By afternoon Miss MacDonald found that her stock of beer was running low and she was beginning to wonder whether she would need to consult her architect brother, Alistair MscDonadl about buildins extensions to the premises. But the rush oi luncheon guests could not upset Miss MacDonald. who had coped with plenty of emergencies like this while she was hostess at 10 Downing street in the days when her father was prime minister. Wearing s woollen dress} with s large silk bow. she deftly and smiling served dishes of roastI beef at lunchtime. swept sway empty glasses from tables. scurried patrol Cass-dish Desi scrwsnlg Announcements and . lo. per and: Is - lsltitlll Oflnisg , ps0 Ind‘; Idlsa 0| flanks sol and. that also 0s slpllosolol. Iiulnu- CIIIIO b! Curb, 11s., In. Iranian latices. ‘ill. p» issli s, do par Ion; Waters us Intern locals, lo CQIII Ind: ls nwstliflnslld sosslnonlssd olcssdolsnos 0o pqss-n ,7 . AIINIIIIZII. 10s. on ind so u. p- snsfiutlsqssl swash-Glands. -- ' ~ - - - - ill wssm -- ooon Isms was: Charlottetown or in good locality. Guardian Toronto Mlnes-Irrcglllarly low- er. Winnipeg-Wheat down 1-4 to l-8 cents. New York-Stocks closed lower. Nay York-Cotton and sugar unchanged; rubber and coffee (Canadian Press) MONTREAL. Jan. l5-Light trading and steady prices featured early dullness on Montreal live- stock markets today. No cattle were offeredmslves continued in an un- settled tone. while hogs remained steady. Receipts reported by Dominion Livesl.“ k Bureau: Calves 78 and hogs 97. ' Calves remained unsettled on the cattle section with no early bids. On the hog division bacon; sold for $875 fed and watered, with the usua‘ $1 premium on selects. But- chers, heavies and lights were cut 50 cents per hundredweight and extra heavies $31 per hundred- weight. Sows brought $7.50. Trading‘ Again Passes 3,500,000 S h a r e Ma r k. (By Frank MloMllien, Associaiod Press I-"mnclal Writer) (A. P. By Guardian's Special WIN) NEW YORK, Jan. 15—Perslsient realizing today wore stock market resistance down close t0 the Vill- ishing point at the finish. 'A flood of offerings hit the mar- ket in thefinal half hour of trad- ing, while the reporting machinery limped along as much as six min- utes behind dealings on the floor of the exchange. Declines outnumbered advances in the ratio of about 5 to 3, al- though relatively few losses ran much more than a 901M. N"! 0105i were fractional. - Oils were ahead fairly consistent- ly until toward the finish. B-fld B few of them retained parts oi early gains, while others weakened with the rest o1 the list, Utilities did a little better- than the average. Rails wgpg ignproved, early, but failed to hold. Many of the standard indus- trials were tossed all day. A 011m" ber of the specialties ranked along with the oils as favorites most of the session. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks, at 57.5. was off .3 of l. point. The 15 utilities in the cai- culation untered the trend to edge ,1 o! point up to 46.6. Turn- over in the stock exchange was at the liveliest clip in 10 day!- amounting to 3,674,800 sirares. 1n addition to the burst oi activity late in the day, the tape fell to the rear for a. time in the mom- m; while prices were swirling about trendlessly. Bonds jiggied about unevenly. obligations of the power companies fimhng takers‘ at better prices, whils rails had few friends. U. S. Government losses softened, with some issues losing as much as 7-32 of a point. A few of the specialty and other issues which thrust against the market current for gains of around 1 to 2 points included Collins dz Newport Industries at 11 1-2, Am- erican Chain at 37 5-8. Allied Chemical at 167 and Union Pacific at 117, A decline of 1 5-8 in McIntyre- Porcupine was the principal change 1n the Canadian list. Fractional recessions occurred in Dome Mines. Lake Shore, Canadian Pacific, Can- adian Industrial Alcohol A, Hiram Walker, Dominion Stores and Massey Harris. Canadian Industrial Alcohol B, Canadian Marconi, Ford of Canada A and l-lollinger were slightly higher. ' fhT-"unrrfrsarnfirrnosef-‘Pii cellar stair, and counted change. lsh-e was even busier than _any of her helpers. "There's been rather a rush to- day," shefexplaintd to the guests. "I'm sorry there's not more mom." After luncheon, when a. little group oi friends toasted her health Miss MacDonald said glowingly she never had had so good a. time -not even in the days when she Zita-rack Aikman at 48 5-8. Ludlum at 26 1-4, " of 1 .. mining market an easier tone in laio trading today and the index lost more than a point to 128.87, the decline more than offsetting a moderate gain in the miscellaneous group, including the copper: and penny golds. Volume was the heaviest of the fsll snd winter st 1,710,000 shares. A 10m of l 1-4 for McIntyre and a point for Dome depressed the big gold group early in the clay. Lake Shore dropped 1-2, Pioneer 25 cents and Braiorne 20 cents. Wright Hargreaves v and ‘I‘eck Hughes were active and 5 to 15 l cen'~! up st the close. In heavy trading Castls sd-| vaneed to 1.58, a new high for; years but the price failed to holdi and the close showed a small loss. I Eldorsdo was firm and Niplssingi unchanged. Norsnda was the fav- orite of the base metals and it closed 1 l-2 up at 47. (Canadian Press) TORONTO. can. 15- Fruukiin . Gubriollo . Gods Lako oldulc . (loudflsb .. Graham . Grsmnls . Greene . . l-ialcrow Hunl Iiock . llnrkrr Iiollingcr Homestead Howey . J M Cons Kirk 11nd .. Kirk Lain- .. Lain: Short.- . Lumaqus iiebel Clo Leo grow 'l‘nsholn ‘Fork H . Texas .. Toburn . Ventures . . . Willie Amu . Wnvsidv unlu- .. Wiltsoy (T Wright ll . UulrYG .. ’lolsl sslcs lilujion, I unARLorrErowN_ GUARD. Trolleys Thrill For . Eskimo Girl (n; '11» 7J5... nu) BEATPLE, Jail. 15-11851 winter, Myrtle lvanoff, 15, spent most of her waking hours crouched near a hole, in the Berills Sea loo off 1161' native Nunivak Island. angling with wire hook. ivory sinker and a scsl slnew line for Tom Codfi-sir. For in the Arctic, women must fish if file people eat- This winter, as a guest bf two former government W000i teachers, Myrtle spends some of her time at a window watching automobiles whining by. She's even ridden in one and she has heard trolley W1!" lights. - Last winter she wore mukluks on hands and a heavy parka o! rein- deer, mink and Wolverine for a coat. The temperature was 30 below zero. This winter she wears patent leather shoes and light stockings. light house dresses and she has- seen no ice. She will‘ start with the fifth grade at school. She is shy and a. spit’ and sputter instead or listen- ing to the crackling of the northern her feet, scalskin mittens on her g smoke. 4 l little bewildcrcd by new sights and' a new sound and new words. But she learns fast. “Her mind's a. reg- ular vacuum cleaner," sald her hosts, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Sprun- ger._They taught school at Nelson Island, Bering Sea, for 10 years until last spring. Myrtle was a pu- pil there for a few seasons. Mrs. Sprunger was lonely here, so the Sprungers sent for Myrtle. There's only one thing missing here, she told an interviewer. That is “cold.” “I am going to write about it all to my father," she laughed. “I have a new word She used the. new word when ask- ed how she lira the idea. of going to school? “Swoll!" MACHINE MAKES ARTI- FICIAL RADIUM WORTH $40,000 AT COST OF $5,000 ITHACA, cost of $5.000 Cornell N. J., Jan. 15-At ‘a University ' has a machine capable of making artificial radium as a substituie for the real stuff, which costs $40.- 000 a gram. Completion of this machine, s cyclotron, the second of its kind in existence. was announced here to- night. The Cornell cyclotron is al- ready in operation. The original cyclotron, a machine which uses a $200,000 80-ton mag- net to produce 10,000,000 to 15,000.- 000-volt rays, was made by Dr. E. O. Lawrence, at the University of California. His assistant in that work, Dr. M. Stanley Livingstone, built and installed the new Cornell cyclo- tron. It is a. simplified, smaller magnet ay machine, Its cheapness promises to make this new type of y, scientific instrument available for generaluse in medicine and atomic investigation. The great expectations for these machines is shown by the fact that Columbia University and the Uni- versity of Rochester are both bulld- ing cyclotrons. These machines make a good many different kinds of artificial radium. The one best known to the public is radioactive table salt. When this condiment is placed under the big magnet-ray, it be- comes temporarily radioactive. Its radium rays last for about a day at full strength. - More interesting than salt are the many other substances, par- ticularly metnls, which can be rendered temporarily --radioactivo— which become artificial radium af- ter being trealod in a cyclotron. Canadian Homespun In Demand Canadian graded wools are held in high esteem by British manu- facturers, and Cl late years some foreign countries lravc shown con- siderable interest in the purchase of Canadian wool. In all the p1'O- vinces of the Dominion, however, there are still many shccp raisers who do not consign their wool for official grading and much of the wool is used in the homo. Many woollen mills in the centre of sheep-raising localities buy wool direct from the producer, and ped- lsrs and local stores barter wool for groceries and other goods. Wod dealers in cities and towns areal- so large buyers of wool. Owing to the low price paid for wool and the necessity of farmers to reducs farm expenditure. home spinning and weaving have received comm". able impetus in late years. and it in estimated that every year nearly 5.000.000 pounds of wool produced in Canada is spun and svoven at home on the farms, particularly for winter wear. Many Canadian mills are large users of Canadian wool, Nlwtlllly those manufacturing yarns and articles of wearing ap- parel such as suits, overccats, mitts, socks. macklnaws and blankets. At the some time, Canadian wool must b0 kept lite from seeds and chaff a it is to bring the highest price. Too little attention is paid to this wall on your way to m PIPE your personal .. . slid. IO developed matter lo-cut. Fine Concert WOOD ISLANDS PRESBYTEBIAN S. SCHOOL CONCERT AND CHRISTMAS THEE The evening of Saturday, Dec. 2i was an evening that will long be remembered in the lives of many of the children of the Wood Islands congregation.- On that evening's very successful Sunday School concert and.Chrlst- mas tree was held in the building known ss the Orange Hall, quite near the Presbyterian Church. The evening was fine and mads were quilo good and sylarge gath- ering was present . ~. The Minister, Rev. R. Hensley Stavert was the chairman and the following program was well carried cu . Opening chorus: “It cameupon the midnight dear" Choir. Remarks by chairman, Rev. R. Hensley Stavert. Recitation, Mary McNeil]. Song "Jolly Old Saint Nlch" by four girls. Mary Bell. Elizabeth McDonald. Kathleen McMillan, Grace McMillan. Recitation, Margaret Mcwilliams. Instrumental music. Meats Har- old Young, muls McMillan (en- core.) Recitation, mill-item yMcDonald. Chorus "Oh Come All Ye Fnitll- ful," Choir.‘ Recitation, “A Big Meal," Seaver McDonald. , Duiet “Cowboy Blues,’ 'Louis Mc- Millan and Roy McMillan (encore) Recitation "Pa. Did It" Jackie Nicholson. Solo "Star of the East," Mrs. Norman Bell. ' Lick the Teacher," McBeth fencored.) Duet “Sweet and Low" Benton and Hilda Bear-ton. Solo "Hobo Blues." Harold Young Insi- ental music, Mmsrs Har- old Young, louise McMillan and Alvin McKenzie (encored) Solo, Florrle Boston. Monologue, Marjorie Nicholson. Bagpipe. music, win. A. McQueen fencore.) Lullaby Song by six girls, Kath- leen McDonald, Irene .McMillan, by Dawson Flcrrie l brand. W0 combed many plantations for tho bctlosfgcown. . . aqedltrlqht lying oiling t bsocothvii-tlnfit. sm o o cool, flsvourcgnstfilsgts, no ow u o t you Everywhere in Canada, pi’? smokers sro giving BAG- E a welcome hand. You will. too. because BAG-PIPE is crumb It's mild and al- ways fresh. Your dealer has it! ROCK CITY TOBACOOCOMPANY. ursrrm Iss5 calamari-sun mosnsunssr Recitation "HOW W9 'I‘1'ied. to of - THE NEW SMOKING TOBACCO 1N THE PERSONAL RUBBER POUOl-l n a soquslntodl wllhm: 11¢ 3311s.. was. o BAG- Poor Seed sun used It is c-mmcnplacc to say that good seed 1s an essential in the . production of a. good crop. stated Professor ‘Richer-t Summerby o! Macdonald College in his presiden- tiai address to the Canadian Seed Growers’ Association. But while there is very general agreement on this, there are still many farmers who do not "put this apparently ac- cepted principle into practice. libr- amination of tho fields and of l-hfi seed which is being used in 60M drills in different parts of the country reveals the fact that s large proportion of farmers are still using seed of a poor grade. either of unknown variety 0i‘ 91 badly mixed varieties. similarly. an analysis of the grain that is being delivered . to tho ,.elcvatora shows that far foo many Yllfmera are using nondescript seed, and only a relatively small proportion are using seed o1 the highest qual- ity of the most suitable varieties. 'To drive home to farmers 801'!- eral the important place of good seed in an agricultural program re- quires that a Mn“ , "‘ ‘ sound, educational program be car- ried on. over a period of years. “LOVE” HAS GONE ' UT OF THE VERS OF U.S. WOMEN PORTS NEW YORK, Jan. 15—Cupid took a staggering blow on the jaw to- day from United states women poets-in leap year, of all times. Oi 1,652 poems in the "Contem- porary Women Poets" anthology just. published. only 82 deal prim- arily with love-the sweet mystery life or what have you, which makes the world go ‘round. Instead, many of the 1,311 women represented wrote about such workaday subjects as the drought in Arkansas. One lyric is sub-titled, "A Rhyme of the Relief Adminis- tration," and another tells what its author hopes to accomplish by her vote. A pcem which seemed on first glance to be about lhe tender emo- tion which "all the worid is seek- ing" turned out to be about a icon flying ncloss a lake. Kathleen McMillan, Tens. McMil- lan, Alice McLennsn and Joyce McLennan. Rocitation, Waldo Taylor. Chorus "Good King Wenceslas" choir. - Reading “Caleb's Courthip," Mi’. James McBeth (encore) Quartetie “Little Darling Pal oi Mine" by Messrs Harold Young, Louis McMillan, Prank McMillan and Alvin McKenzie fencored.) Recitation, "Driving From the Rcar," Ida McMillan (encore) Song "High in the Heavens" by five girls, Mary Bell, Marion Mc- Phee, Catherine McQueen, Kath- leen McMillan and Grace McMil- lan. "The Mock Wedding," Dawson McBeath, James McBeath, Wilfred McMillan, Waldo Taylor and sin- clair Crawford. Trio "Prisoner No. 999", Harold Young, Louis McMillan and Roy McMillan. 80b "Strawberry Boon," Harold Young. ‘ Dialogue "Home Speed." Sinclair Crawford and Iiester McMillan. Address, Rev. R. Hensley Stav- ert. Closing chorus World," Choir. The program was scarcely well closed when Santa onus arrived. bringing a message of good cheer to all. Notmrany minutes elapsed before he was busy handing out the largo number of gifts for the many children who hsa assembled in the hall to bide his coming. "Joy to the It may, or may not indicate that romance ls losing its grip on Ameri- can womanhood. Although the index includes "Late love," "Light love.” and just plain "love" three times. the famous four-letter word long ro- uarded by poets as the cream in their coffee appears in fewer than 20 titles. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Bruno Hnuptmann and Christopher Columbus are among the few men who inspired verse in the collection. The Hauptmann poem begins: "Perhaps Yt was a plan That for a little while This alien should nest secure Within our land." Men in general play second fiddle to field and stream, the stars and rzcrcral observations about life. "I am the bride of the sun." sings one woman ncet: and another. "I children in u!» congregation Bantu had not forgotten quite a number of thosi- who are no longer child- ren. - Among the different gifts to the grown-up folk was s beautiful pair of fur-lined gid gloves to the min- later. Rev. R. HeuslcyStsvert sncl a sung-sized to the‘ ever- fsithful Janitor of the church, Mr. Hugh McKinnon. Just before Santa said farewell he was given three rousing cheers and a tiger. \ The gathering was then closed with the 5108138 or tho Notional Anthem. .5158‘! , was one of the first ladies of the Rltchic .. land and extended hospitality to gygbung: - - a statesmen and diploma" Ind l9 Wood Kirk ..'. ..'.'.' a leaders in all other walks of life. defect in upgraded fleeces. rw- ~~ * BRINGING UP FA' , . m. co powwow saw fr! elco-rr- ...|'|.\. so Amen-mower“; ‘fl-IIIRSTINLIN KITHI: ‘can m. ‘ “$505116! i And wbiiq remembering all of ty I OITTIR TAKE A TAXI am the city of Pittsburgh." A third writes, "I, s Senator, salute you, friends." However, there are lyrics entitled, "Two Men, “Three Old Men." "American Men,” and "The wid- ower." The book is one of the few Am- erican anthologies of feminine verse. GLOEINS WEEK-ENDS LIKE A HINGE NEW YORK, Jan. lfr-lMrs. Gloria Morgan Vanderbilt today submitted a bill of $6,000 for "extra house- hold expense-s’ in tho support of her dsushtcr, Gloria. - Surrogate James A. Foley, who has charge of the 12-year-old girl‘: money. was surprised to find these items included: Forty cartons of cigarettes. ‘ Three cues of ale. ' Half a dosen lipstickc. Gloria. lives with her aunt. Mrs. mn-y Payne Whitney. but spends week-ends wiih- her mother. DOMINION OP CANADA PROVINCE 01" -PR.INCE EDWARD Probate In re estate of Ma-liflfat C- Mawlcy,.lats of Charlottetown in Queens County in the said Prov- ince, formerly o! Summerslde in Prince County in Prince Edward Island. single woman, deocssed testaie. . By the Honourable Harold Leon- ard Palmer, Surrogate Judge of Probate, 6m, dsc. To us, Sheriff of the County oi Queens County or any Constable or literate person within said County. . Greeting: ~ _ Whereas upon reading the peti- tion on filo or George J. Tweedy of Charlottetown aforesaid, Bar- risior-at-Law, the Executor of the above named estate, praying that a elation may be issued for the purpos; hereinafter set forth: You as ‘neroiore Jrereby required to te all persons interested in tilt said Estate to be and appear before me at s Probate Court to be held in the Court House in Charlotte- town, in Queen's County, in the said Province, on Wednesday, the twelfth day of February next coming, at the hour of eleven o'clock forenoon of the same any to shew cause if say they can whv the Accounts of the said Estate should not be passed and the E5~ tsto closed as prayed for in said petition and on motion of George J. Tweedy, Elam, Proctor for said Petitioner. And I do hereby order that s true copy hereof be forth- with publlshed in some newspaper published in Charlottetown afore- said once in each week for st least four consecutive weeks from l-ht date hereof snd that a true com‘ hereof be forthwith posted in the following public places respectively. namely, in the hall of the Court I-iousg in Summerside sf id, in the hall of the Court House ill Charlottetown-aforesaid, and at "Y near the Royal Bank of Canada m Charlottetown aforesaid AND I do hereby further order that a irur copy hereof be forthwith served on the Attorney-General of this Prov- ince so that all persons interested in the said Eststs as aforesaid may have due noting thereof. ' Given under my hand and Seal of thc ssid Court this 8th day oi January A.D. 1935 and in the 26th year of His Majesty's reign. (spa-i n. n. rsuuss. JuQs of Probate. (LBJ L-lV - coo cs umamu‘ ii men wannabe mo» as“. q: PAPlR-MAGG as sac-r aAvs coma 15 70am “Ea-m”?