Prince Vote forA NETT, in K 8 or .. pound packagell Due to the shortness of atiu-e to interested persons. this paper but we would names on the ballot. w» lzlliil-ai Tile wonder still grows that so good a tea' _ ‘as MORSE’S BLUENOSE TEA can be sold ~ _at-so low a pfltléirllllllytkfljlfilllifi per_ half call on the electors of Queen's County. We would be pleased to explain our platform to any- one calling at our Committee Rooms, and would send liter- Our party his no funds to print an advertisement in t ask for your support and trust that you will see fit to mark Reconstruction Candidates. is algn we are unable to Olll‘ your X after the first two , EARL INGS, BERNARD ii. HUGHES, §;:_ ' As Liberal Candidate flouse of Commons, I have October 14th, I shall be glad f herwise. ntague, P. E. I. ctober 7, 1935 t public auction on the mill site on Friday, E35, at 1.00 p.m. Tile property 'ith Rotary and Shingle outfit, and 9Q acres of land gdjoining, 20 acres clear; the ard and soft woods. Bounty. For Exec utor, further particulars Property open for inspection Beorge J. Tweedy, Klharlottetown, v Proctor. i Ability To See Comfortably l The object of a modern eye 5, service is to enable patients to iseo comfortably. That means meeing without strain on the ieyes. And a.iso the avoidance ;of many bodily results of eye ‘strain. That thought deserves Ithg consideration of sii who "are not certain oi the condi- tion of their eyes. G. F. Hutcheson Jirclcssicll-llltllrds- MeLEOD £9 BENTLEY W. B. BENTLEY, K. O, I. A. BENTLEY, K. C. hunters and Attorneys-qua.‘ l, MONEY '1“ LOAN Office: 180 Richmond Street. .____. J. ll. ilacllcnalll, li.ii. IAIIIITII. BOLICITOI. lo. l IID) Billing P. l. IIIIIO. and 0o bit attention. ‘srftflnw atvautbcvcr! Tojvlzlelmlijlectors of Kings County ign to visit the homes of all prospective supporters, but, m doubt, have missed a number of electors. Should there be any such Electors, who wish me to pay ‘them a visit before the Election which takes place on - FOR SALE - j’ The valuable mill property of the late Alexander McLean of Head of Montague, Kings County, All the machinery in good repair Terms made known at sale. i‘ " This is one of the oldest and best mill Union Road, Kings County. HASLAM, B-Aq LLB. for Election to the Federal endeavored during the Cam- to do so, if notified by letter or. Faithfully yours, THOMAS V. GRANT, will be sold October 25, consists of mill equipped balance under growth of good sites in Kings apply to Alex. MacPherson, at any time. ALEX. MacPl-IERSON, Executor. L1163-10-5-12-19 TURN CLUBS INTO TIRES (Canadian Press) . Oct. ll-Automobiie tires will be made of rubber trun- cheons which German police car- ried until their use was forbidden recently by the Ministry of the In- when at last Ann looked up from self think anything at all. Last “ Feather in Her ‘Hat. UJULIIANNIIOOBO Annawoksathighnocntoilnd Rita. missing, but while aha dressed, the living mom door opened and Rita dashed m, breathless, a. paper under her arm. I “It was all a. lovely detective story," Rita. cried, waving the paper “Thcbodyinthepoolwcsa and Fuhrman Wells wasn't murder- edi . . ." "What," Ann asked, puzzled, “an you talking about?" Rita cams into the bedroom and spread the paper on the bed. "Read it-and reflect on the far-reaching influence of a United Btatu Sena- Ann bent over the paper, her eyes roving over the page until they came to rest on the one-column picture of Fuhrman Wells. Then she saw the incredible heading: ATCIRB ssonmanv Fuhrman Wells Reports own Death. Then Drownspscilf in iteflectin! o0 . < LEFT MYSTERY BEHIND Police Unable To Explain Presence oi Dummy “Corpse" Found Beside Dead Man. “Suicide . . .?" Ann said. V88"!- ly. "They can't get away with that. Fain-man Wells was murdered - 1n cold blood." But when she had read the full report, she was not so positive. . . . The telephone call that. had brought them all hurrying to the rcflefitlfll! pool had been traced to the phone in Foul-man's apartment. In s drawer not three feel: from that phone had been found a piece of copper wire exactly like that twisted around Fuhrmans neck. And one a table in Pullman Wells’ bedroom had reposed more than a dozen de- tective story agazines and a copy of the suppressed book. “'I‘he Fine Art of Self-Destruction." Rita put a finger on the paper. "Listen to this, Ann: “ ‘In the dead man's apartment the police found a. note which readz" You know too much to live. If you are not back at work Satur- day morning, I'l1 put you where you can't talk. “It was signed, “Run- brecker." Police said the note was obviously a forgery. " ‘Senator Runbrecker at first re- fused to accept the theory of sui- cide, but finally agreed there was no other explanation possible. Wells, the Senator said. had been suffer- ing from a mental disorder. The forged note, together with the fact that the clothes on the dummy "corpse" were found to belong to the Senator's son. Deane, formed the substance oi the conviction that Wells committed suicide in 1n _ef- fort to incriminate the Senator or some member of the Senator's fam- 1y... "What do you think?" Rita. asked the paper. Ann was almost afraid to let her- nlght. she would have laughed at the suggestion that Fuhrmsn Wells had killed himself. Yet now, with the information provided as a result o! a feverish midnight investigation, talked at once, excitodly. Home twenty minutes later, when they went out to the street, there were two cars. Anniurned question- ing eyes to Bill, but he had already slipped his arm through Rita's and was moving away toward his own machine. "We're to meet at the Everglades at seven-thirty," Lee ssld-whm he was under the wheel. "Any place you want to go, particularly?" Ann smiled. "As far away from this town ss possible, if you don't mind. I need a chance to pull my- self together." "If," said Ice. "you don't mind ridinglnasealedcabin with an auxiliary gas tank in your lap, I'll haveyouinLosAngelcsintimc for breakfast tomorrow morning." "You forget," Ann said, ‘laughing, “that Rita and I begin our careers as government clerks tomorrow morning . . . Justatthemomentl don't. think I'd choose Los Angeles, anyway. Ehnvilles nearer and if you want the truth, I'm homesick." “Elmvilieb the home town?" "Hmm. And it was never more at- tractive to me than it has been since last night. That's the baby in me. The minute something happens, I want to run nome to my mother and father." "Elmviiie . . ." Lee repeated the word several times, thoughtfully. "That's west of Hartfoud, isn't it?" "Northwest. About three hundred and fifty miles from here, I be- lieve." Lee nodded and Ann, studying his portfolio out the corner of her eye, wondered if he were really inter- ested in her-and if so, why? ‘Not in all the city oi Washington, very likely, was there a girl who would not have considered it a signal honor to be invited out for a ride seen with him in public. But here he was dodging his own crowd to go out with a girl who, socially, rated zero minus and whose only claim upon his tune was that accidents- meetlng in Mollie! apartment the night before last. "Don’t mind li we drop by the airport for a minute, do you?" Lee asked her. "I'd like to have a look at the sardine earl that brought me across the country." Another time Ann would have been elated by the prospect of in- specting the sealed-cabin plane with its celebrated pilot as her guide; but now she could not iree her mind of the lose ends of last night's tragg edy and she felt no interest in any- thing beyond the immedlatc possi- bility oi getting out into the coun- try, away from everything oven passingiy familiar. However, cour- tesy demanded something more than an honest answer and she said, pleasantly enough: “Oi course. I don't mind." And feeling that this had been less than convincing, she added: "Ii I didn't have to carry that. gas tank in my lap, I might propose that you take me up for a bird's-eye view of the city” Lee turned his head, smiling. His eyes shone. Ann was to come to know that look of mysterious prom- ise, but now the combination oi half suppressed smile and bright laugh- ing eyes meant only that Lee Mon- day was revealing himself as a most it was as plain as day the man had planned every move of last night's gruesome farce. And no one. cer- tainly, had manufactured evidence simply as an accommodation ‘.0 a United states Senator who wished to avoid unpleasant publicity. terior. _________._. SCRATCH CAUSES YENTANUS (Canadian Press) But while Ann's reaqm accepted what was obviously true, she said in answer to Rita's question: ' ' "It makes sense, and it doesn't." "That," Rita nodded, "exactly ex- DEPITORD, England, Oct. 11 — A scratch on the hand suffered by Ronald Laycock, 12-year-old Erlth boy willie picking blackberries caused tetanus. The lad died a few days later. See st first hand the Old Country's strong economic “come back": CIIIIITIAO mid III YIAI SAlLlIOInk IIIIIOT OIA LAIII u British and (lowbunblpm €'°'i‘.""i'>'i.'.'"il°°.""r‘i' sac co c ea ssuc ‘OCOIOH 5n wtctbei V younavci eablumnrisior rdciasl. .='.~.=-..-» presses my feeling about it. After reading that, I have a doubt Fuhr- man was responsible for all the fake telephone calls, for the dummy's ‘corpse’, and the bomb-and for his own death. And still there's some- thing inside me that say, ‘Pay no attention to facts . . . Fuhrman Wells was murdered?’ "I know," Ann said. She pushed the paper aside and lay across the bed. "Which probably proves we're both too stubborn for our own good. Having decided it was murder-and heaven knows it looked like mur- der—ws resent having our minds changed for us, facts or no facts." mu. had, without act- ually thinking about it, taken it for granted that Bill Hudson would stop in some time during the day. but if Ann had expected Lee Mon- day as well, she had said nothing about it. When they arrived togeth- ‘erAnnaskedifthcyfeltanyillef- THE OPPORTUN IT jnwl- TRlCYCLI AGAIN f; PAST 0O YOU THINK THAT HE SHOULD EVER B! ALLOWED ' OF BREAKING UPv attractive and interesting young man. CHAPTER s Les drove the car as near as pos- sible to the side entrance of the terminal building and told Ann, "I'll be back in a minute or two." He darted through the open door of the building. Like giant birds chasing their own tails, two planes circled the field at an altitude of several tllou- sand feet, while not more than two thousand feet up a sight-seeing “bus" was lust coming in from om. of its many trips over the city. Ann sighed. Twice in her life she had been up in a plane. Her total flying time, she imagined, had been less than ten minutes. And she had seen nothing, of course, except the Eimvlllg fair grounds and, in the distance. Elmvliie. "All right, Ann . . ." Lee. was standing lust within the doorway. crooking a finger, snllling Ann got out and went inside where she was introduced to at least half a docen men and two girls. "We're in luck," Lee told her. A third girl came up and held out a leather coat. "That will probably iii." she sold. "We're about the same sire." Ann was introduced andinformed she was borrowing this girl's scat. Y with the famous young flier, to be, 5 AllllTIllll SALE At NORTH RIVER BRIDGE I n. instructed by PAIIII A» I038], to loll by Public Auction on bin pruminoa at loath liver. ON .WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 16th, 1935 As" One O'clock sun-p Ila valuable farm conaiatlll of acres clear harm-ll llllll "l" n roperty Gun" u.‘ one I? tbs oboleofl l0 OI ll with up-to-date house eooailtlli ‘l modern convul- iottetown, inga, large frame 1o rooms with all ences. Aisoatibe sumotirnaand pilel! will offer by Public Auction his valu- able property situated at 1M and l0! Elm Avenue. This property has O lwge novv burl situated therein. Thou properties are for a! ‘vale sale until day of e. ALDO STOCK. CROP. IIPLIIINTI IUBNlTUI-E Al AND HOUIEHOLD FOLLOWS:—— STOCK-d. your old Colt. O choice Brood Bows with llttors. 2d IIIII Ind Bullets. ' 0B0l'—l uoro Potntoel. 1 lore Turnipl. 3'4 lore Ilauglcl, quantity of Hay. llliPLImmNTB-l liacCormleh Deer- ing Mower, new, I, Team Truck Wal- gon, I Hay Bake, I Cook-ahutt Dino Drill, a aeta Disc Barrows, I. not of Iron Iinarowa, I. Walking Plough, I Boiler, 1 Turnip Tulper, 1 Driving Burn. 1 Driving Sleigh. a Wood Blelgha with boxes, l dtumping Machine with cable. 1 Auto ‘lruck Body, I Farmer's Boiler, I. Cream Soperator. (new Iielotte) I Daisy Churn, I. Double set Team Harness, bran mounted, l let lxpreaa liar non, brass mounted, 2 nta Driving Harness, I sot Icoteh ‘lope, I pr. Quarter Boots, I. pr. Knee Boots, I Riding Saddle, 1 Stewart Ball Clipper, 1 Anvil, 1 Drill llllokOmftli, Vice, Carpenters Tonia, I setn Block and Tackles. i. Wire Stretcher, I Plymouth Sedan Car in good condi- tion, Iorka, Shovels, Hues, etc. HOUSEHOLD IUBNITUBE Chesterfield Bulls, Dining Room illltl. Bureaus. 8 complete Beds, Cheat of Drawers, Boll Top Desk, lune sewing Ilaeniac, Wantin- houae Radio. l Iloor Ifllflpl, I Large lingo, Quantity of lulnld Linoleum. Modern Alaska Kitchen BIIIO. Ban Burner. No. ll. Quebec "W". Laundry More. Washing Mnclluo with Wringsrl, i Orenrn Cans, ""1 "l!!! other articles not mention- sALI cum positively on time. u. J. A. MACDONALD, Auctioneer. L-ucs-zo-n-n should ask. I flew it to Chicago a month ago." Abruptly, his heels clicked. "Well, thanks, everybody. We'll be back shortly. Rgady, Ann . . .?" She followed Lee throlllh an of- flce, along a hall and out in the Open. pie took her arm and to- gether they msrched across the porchllke platform and down the stcpstothefleld . . .Annwasina. state oi ecstasy. She was going up with Lee Monday! she looked up at Les and laughed. s vibrant, joyous laugh that drew his eyes down to hers. He pressed her arm against him. "You're sweet. Ann." he said. “You're sweet to say it," Ann said. That was all then. When they came to the waiting two-place cabin plane, they found other things to mcrumm The Same Old story allia- three thousand years. before Christ, the Phsraclls, or Kings RM.‘ have a recorded history embraces thirty-due dynasties, with msny hundreds of Kings. Teetotal. ism was own: and practised by them for lwer two thousand years. Piutuch. who lived in the first WWW of the christian era. tells us that ‘fwine was wholly forbidden to the Kings of Ikypt." r1 llhe Berni-inns knew 2.000 years before Christ what a. curse liquor was. that means that for almost gniaed by lawmak a. limit ls a very old lend. but China is as old. or older. Eleven hundred years before Christ (3,000 Y8"! I80) the then Inlpemr of Chins was _sc impruscd with the horrors wmlght by drlnkflaat he forbade the use of wine. Inter he ordered all grape-vines to be de- stroyed. ‘rhlnk how dangerous wine must have been considered if peo- ple had to be deprived of sfopcs and fresh grape Juices protect them from intoxicating liq- uors! There were always men in Chins. as there are in Canada lo- day, who found the liquor business extremely profitable. And some- times thero were rulers who loved the stuii themselves. and did not try to enforce the laws. Bo the trafllc came and went in Chins. An Emperor who ruled in the fourth century aficr Christ (450 A. D.) found such terrible drinking and dmnkennbm he ordered that silllouor makers. sellers and drink- ers should he beheaded-Pond many thousands perished. Three hundred years later (isi AID.) there was another huge beheading of liquor drinkers and makers. And only 668 yous ago (1270 AD.) all liquor dealers wave condemned to bsn- ishment and slavery. The bravest of all the Grecian nations, the Spartans, who flour- fished long before the Christian era, structive of bodily strength and socdserlss. ‘roprovethlstotheir children, they sometimesmade their slaves drink. in order to show how talk about. O O O O O Washington from the air was only a memory now. They had flown dir- ectly to the Capitol. circled the dome, followed Pennsylvania avenue to the White House and then swung off to the right and headed for Bal- timore. Inc's seat was s. little for- ward but by raising their voices slightly they were able to converse without difficulty. "After Washington," said "Baltimore looks messy." "Good town, though." Lee said. _"Oh, look! A train . . looks like a toy, doesn't it?" "Or a worm," said Lee. They talked like that. Little out- bursts from Ann. calm, amused n- Jolnders from Ice. To Ann it was all new she was inexpressibly thrilled. (To Be Continued.) AIiB. AMERICAN WOMEN . Alt! GIVEN MOI! ' LUXUBIES BY MIN NEW YORK, Oct. lP-The Am- erican man again is seeking wayacf enhancing the charms of his wife tours. the demand for luxuries Is glowing. Perfumes and high-priced motor cars are also being bought in greats-r quantities. Salel of rough disuionds from foolishly they acted. ‘flleir great.- est lawmaker. Lycursus. who lived over 800 years before Christ, had all the vineyards destroyed, to pre- ventany one from wine. Our Bible tells us of s m hty Persian King named Oyrus. ho lived about 550 years before Christ. In the books of ma, Isaiah, and Daniel he ls much spoken of. Iic it was who allowed the Jewish cap- tives in Babylon to return to their own land. I-Ieroditus, the Greek historian. tells us that uic success OfQYFuswss dueto hisrefusai to touch liquors oi any kind. At the court of h‘s grandfather. the King 0i’ Media. Cyrus was the King's cup-bearer, and was expected to taste the wine before handing it to This he would not do. knewthitwineandbeerwerede- 81°" BEFORE you take any pcparationyolsdoxfthrcw all about, for the reliefofhead- pains of rbauna- iiun, neuritis or neuralgia, ask ‘your doctor what he thinks about it-in comparison with "Aspirin." We say this because, before the discovery of " ' ," moctso-cailcd"psin"rcmedies were advised against by phy- sicians as bdng bad for the stomach: or, often. for the heart. And the discovery oi‘ "Aspirin" largely changed medical practice. Countless thousands of peo- “ASPIRI FmdQut , From Your Doctor if the “Pain” Remedy _Yo_u Take is SAFE ' Don't Entrust Your Own or ‘You: Family's Well-Being to Unknown Preparations. Demand and Get pie who have takeuPAapil-in” year in and out wvirhout iii effect. have proved that the medical flndingaaboutits safe- II t! were ocfloct. Remember this: "Aspirin is rated among the fastest methods yet discovered for the relief of headaches and all ‘common pains...ancl safe for the average person to take regularly. O "Aspirin" Tablets are made inCanada. “Aapirin"ia the reg- istered trade-markoftbeBayer _ Company, Limited. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet. / m, $7 ‘l? .. fig’, 9°53 \ E ill liquor wls not dia- covered until about 800 you‘! I80. was commonly known un- are ago. and crime and wietchedn for which responsible all down through the ages can: from wine and other fermented is said tohsve been Babylon about 4,000 years ago.) Yet some foolish people say today that there is no harm in Ioadtotholar The moderation people declare thattiley nulstnghttwo setsof foes-the people of the bocas busi- ness tnd the "total abstinence PO. They are quite mistaken; they have only one sot of opponents. The boocs sellers would be much bigger fools commercially thanthey are if they entered the lists against moderation. All their interests are with the moderation idea. Ibr moderation ls every ‘s medic the bar. the bottleand the broken life. There isn't a plnple- nossd bum in any whiskey rowgut- ter who took any other route. Why should s liquor profltaer fight the moderation erlwd, when any public accountant can promise him exact figures on the number of barddrinkershehsurs fogctout of "every thousand moderate drink- en The thing is mathematics, not hyltu-ios. The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company can supply the statistics; out oi so many young people beginning to drink this year, so many _wili have become con- nrmsd drlnkersby 1936,10 many . . perf good why most of the churches wiilhave nothing to do with me Council for Moderate Drinking. The Council was born yesterday, . but the churches weren't. 11hr many years they've had their hands full with the effects of moderate drink- ing: and they believe in it ulittle as they-believe in moderate fooling with any other habit-forming and charceter-dsi-mnlng indulgence. - Ohrfstian Advocate. sol-than offence isloo mime Dow's presiding at Canada's There's i time on the wail and ha asks- Who ispable To decipher what's written? Acct dents, murders, deaths show N‘ ,. gem 00110981 Th9 Ollidl from which they flow But the Great Editor whose chil- dren are billed Knows the facts of every case. They are not ss He willed. Mrs. V. I.. Miller. llnviromnent We have heard 888m during the week the old hsckneyed ststeme ‘ "You can't make people good by law." We won’ if Jehovah made amldakewhen Iugave to His people the moral law. and would it ~ not be better to cast aside the re- sults of past struggles incorporated in protective legislation? It is not a question of changed lives verslm legislation, but changed lives plus legislation lo produce an virmment in which life may pro- perly develop. Our Lord once faced such c. problem, and for answer, gave the parable of the seed and the soil. There is no intimation thatanyoithsseedwasbsd. The crop failure in three cases out of four was not attributed to the seed. but to the soil or environ- ment. If all of the seed had fallen into hospitable soil, were would live been an abundant harvest. An intelligent farmer knows that it is not suiiiclent to have good clean seed, necessary as that may be.the soil must be’ good also, and con- stantly enriched by every means known to science. So a good rnsn trying to live a good life needs a good world to live it in. Lyman Abbott, a generation 880. Nminded Christian people that "Palm trees would not grow in Labrador." Jesus i000 years ago. told His age that oven good seed would not produce a harvest" in inhospitable soil. We have a. serious responsibility in pro- dudlng an Avlronnle ‘ where young life and older life will have a chance to reach its highest p06- sibilities. Why? Why are Alcoholic Drinks W“ hlbllcd on Polar Expeditions? Because they waste the heat of the body. Why are Alcoholic minke pro- hibitod to soldiers on a desert Lcscn 1o normal. now- rumors 1o m: arrears or coca aemarw _/ DICK OENQTT "I IF nor aeuue-rr-wl-lor Wit-l” IttAT‘ i‘ facts from their drenchinl in the “It may be). little chilly up there," Bcilth Africa are flilifltlil 50 distilled an such as rum. which”. befold; flflwtlnl D001- And the 11110816!!! said Ice, with asiylcokat the men. cent above est your, and - brsnq, gin. etc. You will my, lie had taken from m; um gems mmm lnquet was on . . . Lee admitted “Up whore?" Suddenly she looked sale sales the gems in the New “Then fermented liquors are milder ~ veneis of gold you‘; they lessee bodily vigor helm! been surprised to loom upathimflloe-lrewegoingupin York area are averaging is par ones." Yu,i.l-lctu.|o.uld.mn.li- And had filled them with wine mammals Puhrman Weill had committed nui- an airplane-over Washington . .?" cent above 1m. elmicre, listen to this: Not one of from which they'd been drink- Why are hing lens ‘met-Gill: 13:11:? ‘l; WWI; mll-oeugwvgzpr.‘ rrmnlnrfmvwheor; Mr h. these ancient nstlcnsknew how o?‘ mine: ma lea Alcohol m mums in c" c ~ as» ' .-.l"“"’l......""“...'°".l....."‘“°". ‘MW d. .:':1.*.'.r::.r.r."" m" "°""'.'.;L....... ... u... 3) ' _ _ —-By Roy Qkucc er; ,_ w, w ._ * mo new: we rmo Muss cam. A j! ¢’.°“'".° "w" i. \. mo l-lsas ls rue alas. um row WEIGI-IlNG on rue. snun-lou- 9 . I LLY 5 ACTION$ Ag ‘ma? 1100K coca A RWGN aaacan/ AND sna MUST cnoos -- - BUFING T"! / RIDE FROM WILLIE — IT'S ' ‘ /