i=1; dcrosaa 1s. .1938 _eavly ln the new year son sans: Two apartment dwelling house, numbers 103-105 North River Rood. Each apartment has three bedrooms. All mod- em with bin fed stoker, double garage, large lot. ‘ One apartment available next month and the other ll. PlllKARll 8r 00. Coal Dealers PHONE 240 -____ a‘. POTATO ' River and Murray Harbor i, 15-4 for appointments. Phone Hunter River No. l or Murray River No. STllllllll FACTORIES Potatoes received by appointment only at Hunter factories. rirrr vr. rrroorrrs CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT I i Currie luildin! ., ,. Charlottetown Th; 163s v.0. s... 452 000009 i .r. s. IlllliiETT. u. s. l Barrister, Solicitor, &c. ODDFEILOWS BUILDiNG g ‘z I34 Richmond Street Charlottetown, P.E.l. t Box 4H Tel. Z330 i O-O-OOOQQOO-O-OQOOOOOOOO’ William A. iietlriin BA. B LLB. , .Sc.. BARRISTEB. SOLICITOR. Eta. y The Queen's l I Holiday . l Elizabeth Corbett ' \, . His voice had risen in his excite- ment. Tilslus turned on him to ask scornfully, “What of the iron gates at the frontier? How will your Jack the Glant Killer get past those?" "He will probably drive his en- gine straight into them, li he gets that far." suggester Paul aznlably "But who knows whether 2-, can ever get that far? The track has not been cleared beyond Grantheim. has it? We ought to be due for e wreck long before we reach the frontier." "The whole track may be clear, since ours was the only train over the first part of it today." Tilsus speculated uneasily. "Yet in the rain and the darkness - but iihy should we borrow trouble? No doubt we shall reach the frontier in safety; and our loyal officers in Gs-antheim ‘will have already tele- graphed to have the train stopped there." ‘They will have, if they thought of it. I wish I had your cheerful certllnty that they ever thins. at all." Paul pressed his face to the window, and appeared to be wat- ching for sotrncthlng in the dark- ness ahead. With whistle shrieking, the train rounded a curve. Prince Paul tur- ned frorn the window. "1 thought so! Well. I'll believe I'll have one more cigarette before I meat my Maker." “What did you see out of the window just now?" demanded Til- SlLl5. "I saw two heads in the engine cab. Even our hero couldn't get along without a fireman, could hez I wonder how he disposed of the engineer? All the engineers have carried slEe-anns lately. because of the state of civil war." Elsa remembered Ted's club, and his summary dealings with the Magdeburgs‘ chauffeur. She was sorry for the poor engineer. But probably Ted had only stunned him. If Ted had possessed himself of the engineer's revolver, that would account for tn; fireman's tractab- llity. "The. fireman is still there? Then if Layton were out of the way, the fireman could seize the controls," declared Til ius. "Exactly!" said Paul. "But that's a rather large ‘if’. You can put that American fellow out of the way, Colonel; you have done so' more than o-nce. But he never seems to stay put. He has a genius for getting in your tray." "I have tried not to be too harsh with him," said Colcnel 'I‘ilsius stifily. "But I rm growing very tired of his stupid practical lat Greet George 8t- 'DENTAL X-RAY Phone 2007 y4+q+pooove >0 0e eeo-ov0+¢'° +¢+H illsrias %L ideiluairl g Ilfrlltel’. Solicitor. Natery. EH- lnetern Trust Bnlltlllll- g Charlottetown Phone i711 i: oeo-ooeoao-oo-eo-o-o-eo-oo-o-e-ee PALMER a unsure‘ e. .|. mamas. all. bb-I- naearsrsa. Mo. Ina! of Non Sootie Chamber! Charlottetown. r-I-I- loan ‘I0 wAN ovooooooeoo 0049i g ilstlesee seri Peaks. A. W. surprises. lac. A. I; PIARI. 1A.. l.l..l lee-cistern. ete. ‘w’ Gelleetlane - alone! to Loan ' l0 Greee George ltreet _ Charlottetown ¢+u+»»»+»»+»»»» Frarierle A. Large l. it. ’IAIIIITII. sobronol. IIOTAI! IQnIIeIIeIOeiedeGhe-han : Ohnrleeteeowmhll. ' leeeenee so _¥Geeege l. Tweedy. 1.6. A. vvaltiree Gauoet. l.i..il. Barrister. Solicitor. llto. Phillipe Building Ill Grafton St- Mon" u, M", rnlleotlunl ilell dr Mathleson Barristers. Solicitors. Mi- ll. l. BILL. M-L-A» u. r. Marrrrusou. can. Attorneys at Lew LOANS ON CITY AND FARM PROPERTIES 1M Richmond St. Charlottetown. P-E-l- ilseiilrse A Irsinor w. r. nseernaz. an. n.0- a. sossaanan TRAINOR. B.A. Barristers. Ew- llleo Bide. J. A. lleaelgse NOTARY. ITO. BAIIJBTEB. SOLIGITOB IJUIMII BUILDING ____________. Jgsepll it. iiiseilililsl. i.i..l. Banister. loiioitor. Isa II Queen Street PIIONI ‘m Money to Loan - __________ it. Alias Ferwer EA- LLB. IIONII TO LOAN LO Ch'town. Collections IAIIISTII. IOLICITOI. lte. t _ a rr. n. mire r t elil GOIIPAIY CIIAITIIID ACCOUNTANTS omceeq- IN CHARLOTTETOWN 53 Grafton Street Phone 2000 l0! 147 Randolph W. Manning, CA. i _________--—————— r.o.o.r. aloe-Nut to Redflla Bwl PHONE 2484‘ n u . l0 PC U!" *4 Q EYES EXAM|NED g Money to Lenin-nu" N GLASSES IElTTED Barrfitgl-lsqastniicrtaure. Eta Cnnnlllln Bani of commerce Bids J s_ R nsoaav r0 LOAN - o »- ' - ms r a. owner. an. l-L-B ' onoMiTklsT galnadlfb Bank of Commas-ea Bldl . can", Km‘ "m Gum ggg g Charlottetown. PHI-l. . ~ Phone 108d _ ’ I "m" b, lppollll-IIQIII . y - 2...... m...“ rots M g p p E |_ |_ i -. A clean-skimming. easy-turning AND ltenfrew ls available to you now. l Th ' l' l ' 0r. iii. it. ilarsol ll ll M llllllY Jill.’ .'L'ir.§.'I.'.l§"n.l.'}'...°°rlZ§li5 -l£~ CIIIIWMM ~ ' ‘w. for this sun-m r will i-ll-Q- -» 75m" mum“ CHAQTEREQ Ilndly demonstrn a Renfrew in , cherlottetawn NT N" your own dairy. There's no obli- " fl] Prince it Phone i012 ACCQU A gation to purchase. Get more . . . l - >o+o++o+ooe>voooo~ _ Eastern Trustggrlflarg as, bx?!‘ wcglly ‘mdmlllu If, J, c, ESS- PhOS-IIAEEOTT Box s“ prove it to your satisfaction. Den Plokard aurora; 1 Jo Mo LadnQlP 177 KENT STREET ‘in’: year get aVNEW CREAM SEPARATOR Ahe Insole . IIIKK scales - wasrma IAACNIOII . as uuaaoraa. cr-raaaorrsrowu jokes." "A joke! Oh, what a joke this is!" crowed Paul. “Huh-Colonel. when it comes to getting rid of a superfluous engineer, I should think the fireman would know enough to do that without being told." CHAPTER XXVIII Through the darkness and the storm the train was running fast- er every minute. As it jerked and jolted over the uncertain road- bed, Tilslus had a hard time to keep his footing in the aisle. But with what dignity he coulri muster, he motioned to the condpctor to precede him. "I am ‘going to the guards‘ coach, to take mea- sures," he announc -‘. Paul got to his feet. "I think I'll tag along and see the fun Want. to cOme too, Elsa?" "Your Highness. better not!" cautioned Carl. "There may be rough work up ahead." "It will be rough. But it should be interesting to wvafch. "Prince ‘Paul offered his arm to Elsa. She ignored his ann, but she followed him as far as the platform of the guards’ coach. There Carl joined them, and Elsa clung to him as they made their way inside. Just at the door of the guards’ coach. Carl whispered to Elsa. "We cannot be so many minutes’ ride from. the frontier now. And every minute gained is a minute toward freedom." A moment later she‘ was alone. She watched him cross the jotting platform and enter the guards’ car. Just inside the door Prince Paul stood rocking easilly with the mot- ion oi the train and watching the pandemonium rwhi:h Colonel 'I‘il- slus was trying to organize into a forlorn hope assault on the engine- er's cab. What happened next came so fast that Elsa could scarcely follow it. She dislnctly saw Carl snatch the revolver from Prince Paul's holster and press it against his side. A-bove the roar c-f the train she scarcely heard the discharge of the chambers. But Paul staggered and sagged slowly toward the floor. She was still wrenching at the door of her private car, but never taking her eyes off the coach ahead, when one of the guards turned to- ward Carl and raised his rifle. By the time she reached the guards’ coach the two men lay in a heap together on the floor. Tilslus stooped over a soldier who was invistlgating the fallen men. “Both dead?" he demanded. “Beth (‘ea-l," ehoed 1h: sidiel‘. “Oh, my poor Carl!" moaned Elsa. "My poo-r Carl!" "Not your poor Paul?" asked Tilslus sarcastically. "You a"e a widow now, of course. But tn or- tunaiely your freedom comes too late to do you any good. Your lover's life too is now lmited by minutes." Tilslus paused to detail two of the guards to carry the bodies back to Else's car. Then he went back to the organization of a platoon to ru h the engineer's cab. Three minutes later his platoon was actually formed. But then at the very last he detached a third guard and bade him remain with Elsa. With the soldier at her elbow. Elsa advanced toward the front cf the coach as the last of the guads left it. The President rwas on the platform. The baggage van still lay between them and the coafcar: ‘Why is that van along when we have no special luggage?" Tilslus demanded of the terrified con- ductor. “The train is always made up that way, Excellency? "The van’ is good cover for that pirate in the engine cab. Well, we can‘t help that ‘now. Our men will simply have to cra-wl over the roof of it.’ ' When the last of the attacking soldiers had crawled to the jerking top of the baggage van, Elsa tur- ned to the one who was guarding her. "Give me a hand there to help me up." she commanded. The man protested against the danger to her; but with her foot in his hand, Elsa managed to get her chin above the roof of the van. The soldiers were doing their best to hang on and at the same time direct the muzzles of their rifles toward the engine cab. Tilslus halfway up the van, was bawling orders at the fireman. "Get the controls" he shouted. "Put on the brakes! For God's sake put on the brakes!" not instead of obeying orders the fireman began to scrar-nble perilously across the coal he had I940. perience and hones“, is ivust gressively with the trade. LIVE POULTRY LOADl-NG A TRUCK TUESDAY 8 AM, TO ll.30 AM. OCTOBER l9 HEAVY CLEAN FOWL-Uc HEAVY rsrrsuro CHICKEN mac-co ACCORDlNG T0 QUALITY FARM-ER! in past years l have been favored with nice business from outlyirig districts. I respectfully solicit this patronage for A poultry dealer regardless .of his business ability, ex- you as you farmers care to make him. If you back him up with volume business, there are times he can talk price og- S. A R. PENDLETON KENSINGT ON as effective and valuable to been shoveling. On the near edge of the coal car he pulled himself erect to point speechlessly up the track. Sure enough, visible in the engine headlight the iron gates at the frontier were racing down on them. At that moment there was the screechl of brakes set Illd- clenly. . A hand waved frmn the engine cab, and above it e face was visible for half a second. Ted‘s face. all right. He couldn't see her, but Elsa hail a distinct view of him just before he jumped. , He had leaped from the engine ca-b directly into the lake. l-le couldn't survive that surely. A split second after Ted jumped, the train hit the gates acrcss the track With the deafening clatter in her ears. Elsa had just presence of mind enough to hang on to her guard. "Excellercy!" he groaned. "Colonel 'I‘ilsius!" "He was thrown off?" gasped Elsa. "Not into the lake. was he?" "No. He was on the other aid; of the train. I saw him fall to the ground. He fell like a log." The train was slowing perceptibly now. And they were across the border! Elissa handbag was back in her private car. She had no time to retrieve that or anything else. When the train had slowed to what she judged was a safe speed, she took advantage of the guard's cran- ing his-neck back toward where Tilslus had fallen. Just beyond the edge of the lake, she scrambled down from the platform and felt the ground safe beneath her feet. (To Be Continued: . tMrarket Details For iltilaritime Shippers WASHINGTON. Oct. l4 —(Spec- ial)—Fish shippers in the Mari- times and Newfoundland need no longer work in the dark against foreign competition, thanks to the Fisheries Division of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Or- ganlzation. Up to date details on foreign markets, production, and exports, with possibilities of new markets are at the finger tips of North American shippers . . . just for the asking. It's all part of an FAO plan ta have greater and better fish eup- plics available the world over, ac- cording to Harry C. Wlnsor, 31, executive officer of the Fisheries Division here in Washington. A former em loyee of the New- foundland Fi erles Board, Mr. Winsor explained today a newly published Yearbook on Fishing Statistics, "the most comprehen- sive statistical review of world fisheries in existence." A monthly Fisheries Bulletin is also available in which informa- tion on world wide fishing de- velopmcnt and conditions ls pub- lished. Attention is given to areas about which little information is available. As an instance, Winsor explain- ed, the monthly report shows that North Coast herring fisheries of Iceland were again a 'complete failure this year. Canada's catch shows a decrease. In January to June of this year, Norway, however, exported 130,000 tons of fresh or frozen herring, as compared to 84,000 tons during these months in 1947. LOWER! BEDEQUE SCHOOL Reports of Lower Bedeque School for the month of Septem- ber:-— Grade X-l. Marina MacCallum; 2. Norman Montgomery; 3. Har- riet Riley. Grade IX-l. John Waugh; 2. Lorne Arsenault. Grade VIII-l. John Montgom- ery. Grade VII—1. Harold Leard; 2. George Montgomery; 3. Shirley Arsenault; 4. Ralph Arsenault. Grade Vl-l. Ralph MacCallum; 2. Georgie Waugh; 3. Janet Waugh. Grade V--l. ‘Robert Montgom- ery; 2. Eric Jeffery Wright (equal). Grade IV~—1. Lorne Holland; 2. Alan Collett; 3. Harvey Arsenault. Grade ll (a) 1. Harry Waugh. Grade II (b) 1. Velda Arsen- nult; 2. Anne Leard. Grade 1 (n) 1. Kathryn Jeffery. Grade 1 (bl 1. Alan Wright; 2. Ruby Arsenault. Pupils having perfect atten- dance wore:—Shlriey Arsenault, Georgie Waugh, Janet Waugh, Eric Jeffcry; 3. Ronald Wright; Harvey Arsonault, Velda Arsen- ault, Kathryn Jeffery, Ruby Arscnnrrlt and Alan Wright. lllgllcsl average: John Mont- gomery, 92.4. ~ H. Ruth Wright, Teacher. and Ronald ALBERRY PLAINS_W. T. The regular monthly meeting of the Alberry Plains W. I. was held v A ling low] D Then u; Wincunle, e Medl- cered Tom Wlncdrnse is net whet you m need when you led low, run down. Wirrcernil helps etrea ea the nervous system and invigorate dy tissues end organs. Wincernil ecu quickly-noon after you arm tek- ing it you should notice e difference in health end spirits. So, if you're feeling low Wroeernie, h I i‘ ‘l e p you ee healthier. Buy n bottle d’ Ilncernle eMedl- eered Tonic today -it'e free fro. harmful drags. Dflut. rrllrniilva rAGE nusvEN lit a familq habit. 4Z4”? Everyone can lmy up to irooo ofihe crrrrrsrvmts ruins a" scares; Savms MONEY is e person's! matter, but buying Canada Savings Bonds is a good habit for the whole family. Everyone in the family may buy Canada Savings Bonds-from $50 up to as much as $1,000 each. Canada Savings Bonds may be bought for cash -or on easy in- stalments — through your bank or investment dealer. t-nrs on Cot. 5th at the home of Mrs. Andrew Doyle, with eight mem- bers and one visitor present. sign. Money was voted to buy some books and a window blind for the schcol. It was dedcied to Red Cross. The lottery for th meeting amounted to $1.00. A con- test was then enjoyed. Next. meet- Meeting opened with thg Creed canvass the district for the Sal- ing at the hcme of Miss Abbi. followed by roll call. The minutes vation Army Appeal. Secretary was gall Collins. Roll coll, payment of of the last meeting were read to send for free health pamph-‘dues. Meeting closed with the and Signed. A bill of $2.50 was lets. Four members offered to do King, after which lunch was paid for the painting of the school some knitting or sewing for the served. Mqig] floqp]; r’ eeAoluow ARE MY INE sz-Eal you room ’ w! UNCLE no , QFZQTHER ONLG, Ace WORSE oat New YEAR'S PEORIA l-rrr ; AND carve? ‘I'M 0N DAY.’ - I. ore-rev p 26o w- HE: . A REST-AND-DIET ONCe-w-STAQTED é Took UPTHE ' PROGRAM, VOL)‘ ' BUSTIMG OUT OF A FIDDLE JUST , know, 1o cues ewe SERGE. oieo/ F02 A PLACE ./, Tue Q/xx/Aees or= ‘woo \lEHl2S ore-w 1o izesr Hi5 a srzaevcaarsim, coutoisr TAKEN", \ ~ HOW ‘DO ‘I THOUGH-r“ LOOK 2 pa. ' @11- lrj . i _, .. . . s... OMMITTEE VISWS‘ A 842011452 ow|_= Mo; a... o: Mifi. ........'..........