_ rues TWELVE ‘Adah A A ATTENTION A meeting will be held ot the L. P. U. Hall Friday, Moy 7, at 8.00 p.m. All members and those wishing to |o|n eve urgently requested to attend. A mutter oi extreme import- once before work starts will be discussed. E. J. MocDOUGALL President. e___ eenseeessoesssssrgi- o P. E. I. Truoknien’: Association , 5i‘ No, Mr. Brown K Gertrude Knevels __-_. “Stop it," she whispered, horrli- , led. ‘Hunt's the two-dollar Krill" you're ordering-do you realize it? Social workers always go Dutch ' and I've only go‘s—" "Wait a moment." sold Brown’ coolly. “You're Iorgetting some- l IIIIW III STOBII. TIMOTHY, MAMMOTH CLOVER EARLY RED CLOVER, ALSIKE, ALFALFA, SWEET CLOVER ond WHITEDUTCH ALL NO. I SEED REGISTERED CHARLOTTETOWN 80 BARLEY, ERBAN and CARTIER OATS, CORONATION WHEAT, SILVERHULL BUCKWHEAT, PEAS and VETCHES. LONGFELLOW and HYBRID FIELD CORN. '* u; ‘;Et?\j;<~es.§._e-;§.-:sa1r3r< wgqrggn-ggjg-yfglxj; i" Also o complete stock oi Garden Seeds, Onion Sets ohd Multipliers, Gordenite Milorgunite and Wizard Fertilizers. Order now while our stock is complete. Wholesale and Retell. . .4 .4“.-- TIIE HALIFAX SEED STIIIIE 00MPAIIY LIMITED Q 72 QUEEN ST., CHARLOTTETOWN I‘ . ’ I, = STARCH FACTORY. ‘ HUNTER RIVER STARCH FACTORY i‘ ' l ' Will Be Open From LAY 4TH to MAY 20TH To Purchase ' cuu. a» LOW sumo: remotes {,4 GEORGE E. FIILL 8t SIIII m ounurv SEIIIIIBE time: A s Saved is A s" that ASK FOR OUR PRICES ‘ The Island Ferti izer Co. Ltd. Over The ‘Bus Stop CHARLOTTETQWN $311‘ Fertilizer Dollars Brace Bldck thing. Yesterday you said I wasn't a social worker." v "I k.now.' Alprii reddened. "It was, horrid o! me calling you o, spy. but I'm afraid I stiil- think it's , true." l "So true and so untender" Brown ‘grinned- "Odd. isn't it, the eliecu i you have on me, April Del’. making: mo spout the classics? There's, nothing in Shakespeare more -" i "We weren't talking abou‘; Shakespeare." “Ne. It was supper. wasn't it? lAn even pieasanter topic. Spies. let me remind you, have to live’ ‘continually among the deadliest: hangers and must keep u-p their; ‘strength We'll have everything lgood that We can grab." i I He continued to under largely land April subsided. She was too, - weary and hungry to argue bu‘. did‘. not rail to realize how lcw she had- falien. Abusing this man to his face-then grafting on him for mi two-dollar meal. No‘. just the cup' of sou-p she needed {or a bracen; but lobster and broiled chicken, and all the little extras you never; got a“. tea rooms. The kind o! meal ,. i.n fact, that April hadn't tasted; gsince boarding school days when} Dad took her out on treats. t The bearable thing about Mr.‘ Brown was that he did not lnsistii upon conversation, though Aprili had a feeling that there was a! good deal he wanted to say.‘ Wanted to rake her over ‘tihe coalsl o! course-they'd all be doing that ‘tumor-row, And Mr. Brown, from his angle o! the work. must be primed with all sorts of argu- ments. -She almost wished she wasn't. too tired to let him beglni it now and get it over, that she didn't feel he spared her because he was sorry for her. Bill Brown remained silent till they drew up at the boarding house door. Aipril held out her hand to him. ‘Thank you very much." she said. "You have been kind." ‘ "Have I, Miss Uncertain Glory? Then will you give me a little Time tomorrow? I want to talk to you." "Mr. Brown," Arprll cried, "I simply can't help ‘the way I feel. There's no use in our talking about it. I'll discuss Relief Extension with you any time, but no: Relief Curtaiiment . . -" “Here - who's talking Relief?" The big young man 'wg5 suddenly closkeo close that. for the first time April became ‘ of his, strength and the warmth o! his personalty. Mrs. Dormizzer chose this moment tor switching on the light above the door. ltshow. ed April a strong, plain face with a laughing mouth. Grey eyes the) twinkied with impatience, amuse- mentfand scmething much more tender. "I can't help the way I -feel, either." said Bill Brown. "I (eel that we are seine to talk-and talk lsbout want to say to yowsome day, Aprill Glory; that will concern no one int the world but our trwo selves." CHAPTER Ill Gwenn Harding and Noel i. Andrews, volunteers at the Vlllr ‘Eldon Memorial, were young per- sons ot the class Jerome King part-timers." and preferred not firs: ouonn as A LAW! referred to as "Junior-League- -to “ '“ The Van ltilden, m By Foouly and Shorten It's no ENOUGH not ms Boss ax- ‘ PECTS ‘IOU T0 STOOGE FOI? HIM“- Burwuen laezrsclueirrnmwm oovou IIAVEIO TAKE n; up? I ‘ // rm avenue A PEST NAMED wloetzoilisc oelnosronsr - TELLHIM you non know wurn e \ I'LL BE BACKITELI. IIIM 1M IN . 4 KALAMAZOO.‘ IELI. HIM ANY‘ i TIIIM! BUT GET V . V fin”, II)’ ,0 \ W»- M r4 // sutossonon! sue WIIATISHESAN c * your euzvroto _ IDIOTISHE NEVER é mayoral/gigs csrsluv l TIIING srulemicwon m,wp§|cy,ou By i l THE GUARDIAN,‘ CHARIsOTTETOWN ' xlilggLllli. ROYAL MOUNTED Con tract Bridge By Josephine Culbertson An Exciting Deal Freakiah deals, when they come up in actual play rather than in some pranksters imagination, us- ually lead to_ spirited discussions among experts. Today's deal gave some well- knuwn masters s sublect tor tur- ious debate, ‘ Eashdoaler. ,. Neltllerlldevtlhlerlble- 410104: @958 its’! Q [gtes N ‘Axq, noses w E 10TH elf-i" s ,1. " gqtr glues QAKQJIZ . ‘A05 i . I This was the bidding in a ruhbI bridge game at a prominent New York Club- llaes South West North 4 Q l5 Q Double Pall a Q 5 A Pass Pu: s Q Pale Pale s s Pun Pass Double Peal Pasa It was inevitable, o! course, that. East's nine-card suit should have touched oii some highly com- petitive bidding. There w“ H0 criticism of the opening tour-heart bid nor o! South's live-diamond overcall-the postmortem discussion- started with West's double oi‘ for her behavior at the meeting ‘five diamonds, and. raged MON‘ furiously around South's bid o! five spades. This last-hauled action by South was unquestionably risky on a four-card suit, but at the same time it. was very tar from illogical West's double of live diamonds meant that North could not, have many cards in that suit, and with East, bidding up to live hearts single-handed, it, was unlikely that North had great heut ieflflh-l- Thus, unless he had an extraor- dinary number of clubs, he hadl substantial length in spades -- not a good enough suit tor him to bid on his own account, but excellent support for South's spade suit. The next point of debate center- ed on West's opening lead against six spades. Actually. he led hist singleton heart. south ruiifed,_and as his only hope, laid down the spade king. After that. the slam was "on ice", and West had to take considerable ribbing lo-r not having led either a diamond or a club. privately supported organization, had to use volunteer labor of such an extentrthat coarser clients had been known to refer to it as the "Young Indies’ Boarding School." That sandy mouse oi an Andrews girl, now-the one with the big innocent brawn eyes behind shell riots-probably labored con- scienrlously enough during her short hours. Tithe more IIGCOTIII": Miss Harding-Bill grinned, re- a lot. Tlhere are things I Inighh-qngmberng what Miss sally Cand- ler hall said: that Owens: dabbled at the Bureau because her tether, a trustee, wanted to be sure that for some part or the day, at least she was out oi trouble. "lMlty, Mr. Brown!" Gwenrfs gaze passed over three patient-eyed Italian women and a messenger boy, to rest apprais- lngiy on Bill's tail figure. "Here, Noel, take the desk." she called “Come on into my room, Bill Brown I'm dying for a chat." As G-wenn slid her long slim legs behind her desk in the cramped little olflce and Bill took the client's chair, their heads nearly touched over the silver ciglrltlb case she fished from a drawer. "Smoke, Mr. Mystery Man?" "fell me the latest dirt, doi We're all an tirrilled here. I think it's simply swell oi you. getting these filthy fraud cast-s checked up." "What do you know about my work?" Brown frowned ovexnhis cigarette Both he and King had agreed that his investigations into clients’ misdoings, as well as certain per- sonal matters, might better re- Was Selby Harding, his lawyer — and’ G\'l'cnn's father-the type o! man who gossips with his women folk, Bill wondered? Certainly. as executor to the late William Brown, Senior. of New York. Washington, Tuxedo and other residences. Harding knew more oi Bill Junlor's altalrs than he cored to have published at present. The lawyer had met Bill Junior only recently, ‘out he knew Bill seniors dir- ectlons, knew that the philan- thropist, weakened by sudden ill- ness and unable to decide on the division ot thejarge stuns he wish- ed o will to the charities of his natve state, had bequeathed the‘. responsibility to his son. (To Be continued) Pi *.'tr..52'r°"‘ ‘me vmm we not: ten oral. miecitu stem, new .- _ I main secret as long as possible. _ ' ..~§. tn» v_*$ <, $ THAT'S THE RIGHT ANSWER, MRJRiPPLE “YOU WIN THE \- JACK POT F-Rlzs/ YOU GET THE REFRIGERATOR, ~ atoms ROOM star, DIVAN, RADIO, BEDROOM s51‘, CHAIRS AND"- IN IT- vss-vvs BEEN READ- me ‘rt-us mos: AND 168E we NAME‘; o»: A tor o: out: FRIENDS I DON'T GEE WU-IV MARY! C’M', QUICK l’ two's GONE! HASN’ T HAD HIS BIQEAKFAST" yes-lamina, 50MB econ‘: , "n-nua or aonune our Mot-Ir!- EJII’ o ='-:“\.||" » vorw ear sows o: ‘INS ' j FURNITURE OLITA HERE S 6E1‘ voun NAME IN THE PAPER -"roo - MY estarrvzs Ans ALwAvs MAKING THE Inom- PAGE- STORY Aaour Your: BROTHER 422w BEIN‘ ARr-"Esrrzo A N‘ Mcizcviuehtueveiz om aeroizewvuelzrzs no“ ‘S wutzne? wuv, u; (LLEJEL) GIDDYUP, HORSE ___.--—-1"