,,.....-_;__._,,_----- ~_.. l .___ ,__ ,_ ' " ' e » I 0 -- .. _.1 »»»-~»- rasnfxnvoim »~.lLb,§-hup~oa~.»h1¢»~¢-~»~~.».»..»"-»‘»-.-° '\..A~."~.%~.?%a.~~~. CUARDTAW' “.2” ' _ -` ‘ . ' _ ’ 2! IN ¢_*’fTHE SHOULDER Qfruit-a-tives” Did Stop Rlleumstism ' F ,` MR. FLOYD »"Fruit-a-tives" soothed his kidneys- irecd his system of excess acid and poisonous waste-regulated hm bowel; -purified his blood-and this is why Mr. S. Floyd of Nanaimo, B.C., ls not bothered with Rhelunstism any 3i°m`lr fl 11 | su ere wit Rheumatism in m shoulders and, as_ most of m friendb were taking ‘Fnut-a-i.ivcs,’ decided to_try _them_ In a. short time tho pam disappeared and _I had relief or the first time. I think this med- lclne really marvellous.” G - If you are bothered with Rheumatism Poms inlths arms, legs or back, or with Neuralgla or Headaches, get “Fruit- s-txvcs. J25c. and 500. s box-gi, dealers everywhere. _ FUN `é sMbm &mm 1-. *Q We use this adjective sd- visedly. Sutlerers from Eyestrain may have perfect vision and there- fore do not suspect the presence of any eye defect. The motive power of the Entire human organism is Nerve Energy. Normal eyes. it is computed utilize about 20% of this Nerve Energy, but when Eyestraln is present, a much larger propor- A__,. - tion is required. Hence defective eyes, through their consumption of an excessive amount of Nerve Energy may seriously affect the functioning of other organs of the body and produce ill health. HAVE YOUR EYES EXAMINED ` F. Hutcheson OPTOMETRIST 4-0-Q-6-#O-0§4' LIVE ~ HOGS We are taking live hogs daily, excepting Saturday, paying high- est market prices. Davis 69’ _ Fraser » , 0 Drofesszonal Cards ` Mark R. McGuigan B A. O BAREISTER., SOLICITOR, ETC. , MQNEY T0 LQAN “His doctor has advised him to -SMILES- GABBY GERTIE _ ` lm-le /' as \ .sf I /. X _ o _\` I X/ § ‘ 1. \ A). \ . ~¢‘_;-»_ ~_ 5’*§f". / / ¢>_.~.i<~...~ / //h"$/'I /I V /I' ` \. "Precedl tions between a husband and wife are generally speaking methers~In» law.” ' ng a divorce, the rela- lm, ... He: Let's go into this cafe and get something to eat. She! it's closed, dear, the pro~ prletor must be out. Don‘t you see the sign, "Home Cooking?" l ,a-_ i IMPGSSIBLE THINGS ONE ~ DREAMS ` He: I dreamed last night that you loved ms. She: Strange, lsn’t lt, the lm- poaslble things one will dream? l ...é-_-;; ..- ._ .: ` M 5 ` E ‘$\‘ A o ' H r/ I ' www. dl *Q ‘I s .A A _--we mlgé E22. ' _ _=;_- __===,=-I-f 73.1/' ` . _f . _ _ _ ADVISED T0 SLEEP iN THE OPEN "Why is that policeman so anxious to take night duty?" Ciiiricron Block, Charlottetown, P.E.l. SINP in U10 09°"- McLe0d & Bentley is tabl` h Cl ` 1928. Great I A BENTLEY w_ B`ENTLEY_ K_ C_ Britain and Ireland had the largest n-13|” and .\",,,.,,e 8, Law percentage and all maritime coun- Bs . Y- - Office: 180 Richmond street MONEY T0 LOAN “' Charlottetown, P. E. l. McDonald & McPhee B. A. J. A. MCDONALD H. F. McPIIEE Se W85 95 iS 8 III tries except thc United States shar- ed ln a 400,000 gross tons increase over 1927. Husband Was Afraid IM- ‘ She Was Getting BARRISTERS. ATTORNEYS, ETC. MONEY T0 LOAN Riley Building Charlottetown »Stewart & Lowther J. D. STEWART K. C. Pneumonia Mrs. Charles Edwards, R.. R. No. 2, Wheatley, Ont., writes:-"Lost winter I was bothered with a ve bad cold, ’ . d h b dwasaf id?'wasgctting “\ N. w. Lowrnsu ;§B“‘1|§)n}‘: ““ "° EARBISTERS. SOLICITORS. ETC. “OM db' on’ ofm noi hm” am. Y °‘n‘l>iSii°y°§‘3‘io5P.M. Prohibition Commission Margate, P. I. l. land all information regarding in- fractions of Prohibition 'Act to the Or 'I' - Grief Inspector B? I. Haywood Derohasier Street, Charlottetown. Pheae 109. ,.,,,........._._...._..__._...__--" ` I Ano smrrnvo mcssasan i otassss rrrrso --‘_-n WD! It _ or. woods Norway Pine - Syrup Itookafewdosessndlwasgreatly relieved. ' “lt also relieved my son, aged nine, of the croup. “I will never be without a bottle oi ’Dr. Wood’s' in the house, and I cannot recommend it-too1highIy." Pri 35 . .bottiei family' ' oo- 51° _-='_3'53-1-- "“ Put up only b5nTha T. Milburn Co. IM-. 'I`Ql'0|l¢0.‘ i- ._ _ _ _ _ _ , , if » V. l- 'yo rgqn. cm. 11,1,"- EYES 'rEs'rI~:D ‘ $- I. W. TAYLOI ronx,'rpu.'».-Lloyds aes- Q ' 1. g, -gum; Shipping announced that an °,¢._¢¢¢|~ 1 nearly can in the , f in alumna sum i Men Marooned g By George Marsh 0-O-O4-O90-O0-OOO-00990100-0904 THE STORY ,f rumlnatlon. "I see you brought plenty of food, the heavily freighted craft. before reaching Fort Albany," replied Quarrier. “But the excess weight will bother you on these tide-flats." Then he con- tinued. "Doctor, I regret that I shall have to put you in the trade-house with your men. I have a spare bed- room for Miss Quarrie. You will eat at my quarters of course." "Oh, we don’t expect much at a small trading post, Mr. Guthrie,” re- plied Quarricr, magnanimously. “If you can make my sister comfortable, We perfectly satisfactory." The girl laughed. “As sister has put up for three months with a. most un- comfortable two-by-five berth on a wobbly schooner, Mr. Guthrie," she said, “I know I shall reveel in your hospitality." Sheliad shed her coat and sou‘west- er and Guthrle‘s eyes measured her with a quick glance. Taller, he thought, than she seemed in the boat, and cleanly made. The eyes which had seemed black, he saw were brown. Young, too, she was; much younger than her brother, and what hairl As he led the way across the clear- ing he wondered llow the presence of this white woman would affect the girl with the dark skin who was slowly coughing her life away. He found himself abarrassed--at a loss for an explanation of the situation to this guest. ' "Miss Quarrler," he forced himself to begin, “we have a very sick girl in the house-it is unfortunate we are so crowded, but I have no other room. I’m giving you mine." He had stopped as he spoke, and stared down at his moccasins; then continued, while her questioning eyes studied his face. “She came here at the spring trade -very sick-would have fllckered out in weeks without proper food. Old Anne and I have done our best. but canned milk and broth are all we had for her. And now it may be any day -I was terribly anxious about her- to get home. You noticed it.-when we met youll' "Yes, I noticed lt," replied the girl. "I knew you were worried about: something. 1'm sorry, Mr. Guthrie. We shall be a great burden at such a time." ‘ "No, lt's not-that. I have room for you, and the others don't. matter. But lt. will be unpleasant for you-in the house.” ' Miss Quarrier straightened, threw back her head and held his embar- rassed glance as she quietly said: ‘_‘Would it help you to know that I was a nurse overseas through the last three years ol the war?" He went red under the deeptan. She would not mind Ninda, then- she. to whom agony and death had been commonplaccs. “I am glad-you will understand. You see-she. somehow, wants me with her at the end-fears I'll not be there. I’ve promised her." As he spoke, the qulzzlcal look of the girl softened to one of pity." - “I know. I will help you." 0 C 0 l e s 0 i O 0 3 Under a sky flushed with the rose of the northem twilight, Joan Quar- rler and her brother stood on the high shore of the Elkwan, whose flat sur- face caught and held the warm tones of the heavens. On guard before the factors house, inside the stocirade, lay the great airedale, satisfied, since ,his introduction, that these people were at Elkwan with the consent ol his master, but nursing, nevertheless a.deep dislike of the man with hairy face, who had dared attempt to rub the ears of the iomer mascot. of the First battalion Royal Montreals. "So there's a dying Indian woman at the house?" Quarrler was saying. “Yeh He asked me to see her. She has a frightful pulse and temperature. It’s a matter of days-»hours, I should think." “Matter of squaw-man, also," sniffed Qual-rler. The glrl's straight brows contracted with irritation. "No, I don't think so. Itfs a. matt/er of big heart. Old Anne, the Cree cook, found her sick in s tlpl, when the Indians were here in June for the trade. Out of sheer hu- manity, they took care of her_" “You believe that story?" scoffed the man of science. - The eyes of the girl hardened. "Well, Mr. Grundy, it’s none of your business or mine. is lt?" "I should distinctly say it was my business-to have my sister, without so much as sn apology to me, shar- ing his house with his-equaw," pro- tested Quarrier lr. tones ot outraged dignity. "V6ry well. How would you like to have e sleep with you and the msn REAT Niovln STUDIOS USL » 1 Etienne,” began unloading boxes from “Yes, we dldn't want. to run short i They all find Lux keeps coshlhhlos A Warner Bros. $500,000. THE movies face long, strenuous wear. a big piCtu1:c. ‘ ing methods, and have BENNETT NATHAN, designer in Metro-Goldwyn studios." Lever Brothers Limited. Toronto clothes care every woma n meets-‘-but on a vast scale! For in the movie studios, millions of do1lars’_ worth of costumes of every sort, from negiigees to camping togs, must be kept fresh and new-looking, in spite of The studios have tried different wash- Msyer, working out a new fabric pattern. "A box of Lux seems like a small thing," says Joseph Rapf, wardrobe supervisor, "bu: it stands for dollars upon dollars saved km lon °° Don was by safe .. a problem of It often takes months, sometimes even years, to "shoot" found that the COSIURICB wlrh Lux. ' best way to cleanse all washable things is with Lux! - With Lux, the studios say, sheer l materials and substantial fabrics, too, stay new-looking more than twice 4.1' long or when washed any other wdy! This means a. saving, studio heads tell US, Of more than a million dollars a year! They all do it! Now e1/:fy great motion picture studio in Hoilywood-Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Paramount - Famous - Lasky, Universal, 8 out f r o m for Mer.ro-Goldwyn- LB85 - ' representative homes in cities ' coast, investi- gutions show, use Lux. Pathe-De' Mille, Fox, First National, United Artists and Wmner Bros.--uses Lux in :learning zz!! umbable ]§zbrz'r.f/ of 10 in coast to .. _ ` , commented the factor with a smile, as . . the sailors. under the direction of g as _ g AILBEN PRINGLE who wears in "Adam and Evil," this beautiful real lace negligee, once owned bythe Empress -Alexandra of Russia, supervises its wash- ing in Lux. Historic gar- ments in the movies are _ deaosed in pure Lux audi. I *_ 1 so SAFE AND A LITTLE cons so FAR, 1T°s ECONOMY To Usa LUX 4- "No, I mean the mouth and the eye.” "What amout them?" “Just this, blind man. I`d feel very sorry for the person who was the cause of Mr. Guthrie losing his tem- per. Whether lt`s pity ol- affection, 1 don't. know, but rather than have the last. hours of this poor child disturbed hc’d throw you into the river and the rest of us with you.” CONTINUED LETTER OF SYMPATIIY The following letter of sympathy was read to Mrs. George Clark, at the January meeting of the Mt.'Stewart Womens Institute: Dear Mrs. Clark: We, your sister members of the Mt. St/cwarl; Women's Ilnstltutc tender you our sincere and heartfelt sym- pathy in this'your time of sorrow, coming as it did at the joyous Xmas reason. Now we commend you to the care of avbiviue Providence, who is t 1 wise to make any mistake and too |004 to be unkind; May He still lead You UD. _ _ ' 0'er moor and, ten, o‘er _craig and torrent, Till thenighi: is gone, ~ ~ And withthe nirl_'n_those angel faces smile, Winch Nu have loved long since, MRS. MATHIAS BUTLER There passed peacefully away at her home in Milvale. on Sunday, January 271:11, Mrs. Mathias Butler st the age of 67 years. The late Mrs. Butler was formerly Miss Charlotte Roberts oi Middle- ton and for the last eight years ol her lifc was a helpless cripple. She was never heard to complain, always cheerful and pleasant and whatever suffering or pain she endured was known to no one only herself. During her illness she was frequently visited by her pastor Rev. W. -V. McDonald who also sdmlni§tered_ to her the last rites of the Holy Catholic Church. She leaves to mourn besides a sor- rowing husband and daughter Mary, who tenderly nursed her during her illness, three brothers and two sisters namely -Ezekiel, Henry, William and Mrs. John P. Smith, all of Kin- kors and Mrs.'John T. Cosgrove of we1llngton,1>. s:_1. ` The funeral, which, in spite of the condition of the roads, was very largclyaitended, wended its way to Bi. Ann's Church on Tuesday morn- ing where'solemn'Hlgh Mass of Ra- nvtsm W" =11ns_1_»`y_ -me pmor ma all that was mortal of I kind wife and loving-mother was laid to rest in the adjoining celuetery, _ 'rm nsllbearers were opment 'r_rsinor. James Malone, John T. Alid lllt awhildn -_ _ Signed on behalf, 'U in the "trade-house? He's given ms his ' room. What mon could he Mt and frrainor. John Redmond. Louis Walsh rnovorm Don.. _lil Us and nt N ahh January 1929, after a short illness Ronald M‘."a'. ' ~' ._ _.'- fs: 'nt » * '._,'~¢»‘:,4..=.:.~_\..;_'1-‘ ' _,_ » ~,- rm 1 i 1 |‘ X 2