PAGE TWO ; l; |. formation 08 J. D. TAYLOR, Phone SIN-L .2. xi af-rtilavoli-ire-ina-qesoswdf 4§§O§ ~O§Q§QO Charlottetown, P. E. I. 9l85-5-2-tws-6i. u not sold by private on the premises. D139-4-29--5-3-13-3I. liiifislss. *.--> . Limited Route. lluiilux, Si. llnlifrax, New York. . Grafton Street, Charlottetown. BUSINESS STANII FIJIIV SALE . Very desirable store and ware- : house with frost-proof cellar in ' splendid business location. Rail and water shipping facilities at door. Apply H. F. MacPhee, Solicitor. AIIGTIIIN SALE Shore Farm of late Neil DfcDon- aid at Pinette-IO!) acres o! land with good bulidlnls» cflnven‘ lent to stores, school and shipping. sale before May 15th, same will be oflered on lhat day by auction at two o'clock R. E. McDONALD. Plnettc. Furness Wlthy & Bo. l PASSI-ZNGPIIIR A5!) FREIGHT Starling at New York and eulllnx n! fni|0\\i|\|,' purl)! in roiuliun. l'ierre_ fir. John's, Mon- treul, ('l\"l‘uwn, it. Pierre‘, St. Juhrfll, a’ J‘ E .5. - r28 ,2" 55s =5 5-; in <55 I. I. "DOMINICA" May 20 May 22 F. F. "ROSALIND" Jun 3 Jun d Donald, December 3lst, FOR SALE or RENT Water front property of tbe late Dr. Taylor at York Lane, Brighton Shore, 311811‘!!! 0! all 1PM" . I A I I ' I J l large and In rear with a three room bungalow. MRS. c. V. HOEFLICH. Bungalow, ' Garage. i F01‘ ID- . B. I‘. D. l Bldeewocl. 86w Jersey. IN IAEIAIIIIIAM JOHN W. JAY Pisquid West and the surround- ing communities were shocked and saddened by the death of one of the most popular citizens, on Satur- day morning, April 22nd, in the per- son of John W. Jay. He was 68 years of age. Less than a. week before his demise John W. as he was familiar- ly known was going about his work in his usual good health. On Easter Sunday he complained for the first time of pains in the abdominal reg- ion. A doctor was summoned, who after making a thorough examin- ation decided that an emergency operation ‘was necessary for a rup- tured appendix. Mr. Jay rallied from the oper- ation in. a splendid manner, and for the first two days following it some hopes were held out for his recov- ery. But these hopes grew less as the days passed, and in the chill, dark hour of Saturday morning. ‘John W. was not for God took him. The late Mr. Jay was a son of George and Mary Ann Jay of Fan- ning Brook, P. E. I. In his early manhood Mr. Jay was a school tea- cher, and taught in Mermaid, Mt. Herbert, Mt. Albion, Cherry Valley, Savage Harbour, Mount Stewart and Plsquid East and West. The last years bf his life were spent on a farm, and here as well as when teaching school he showed himself a workman that needeth not to be ashamed." Ho married Mary EllzabethiMc- 1890, who 17m- o tat 1r. nun". Prlu-ilcn include»: animuln, fnxn-s nnll fowl. Lillmrillury purnlllfel. Slree lllbd-S-ll-lsr-lmo. (‘Iliarlntfcilnvn Axvnll, (IARVELL BROS LTD. ._.__..._.._______- — Bottles Wanted if Pints and Quarts. Phone 1107 91 04-4-2741 Professional Cards DII.‘ I. E. BROKEN Yi-lvrn ‘iry Physluiun nml Nurgeon iiru uuic ljuirerslfy Toronto. Punt grmiunte coningioua, lnfectlona / ami phflllelilf: diseases, England and nil domesticated a-rumiiunllonn, ruffle, mmluglnms nhurtlnn. l~“n\vi_ pul. lurum (Iiseum-n, um! nl| gummy, Office and residence 4! Great George f. Phone QM. »McLEOD & BENTLEY Stewart 8. Lowther J. D. STEWART, K. O. N. W. LOWTHEB. BARRISTERS. SOLICITORS, ITO 84 Great George Street . MONEY T0 LOAN J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. O. -Bm»rister and Attorney-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN Office: I80 Richmond Street H. F. MacPHEE, B. A. BARRISTER. SOLICITOB NOTARY, &c. Riley Building, Charlottetown MARK R. McGUlGAN, naamsraa, sonrcrroa, no. ~ MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block, Charlottctowndllll. .I.A. MacDonald, il.ii. BABRISTEB. SOLICITOB, fie. Riley Building f" iottetown, P. E. Island. Money in Loan and Collections infant daughter, who pmdeceased him 36 years ago. “Not now but in the coming years It may be in the better land We'll know the meaning of these And there. yes; there we'll under- fcrings : Family, Session of United church. Charman, Edith, Harry, Eliza and Crawford. Florence, Mr. and lvirs. S. D. Jay and Lea-rd, Mrs. Terese. McAvinn and family, Employees of Carter's Seed Store. The ‘Trustees of the People's Cemetery, with two daughters and two sons, Marlon, Mrsheany Jay of Fanning- brook; Isabel, Mrs. Jas McLaugh- lan, of Stanhope, Malcolm and Ken- neth at home, are left to mourn their loss. Mr. Jay is also survived by two sisters, Mrs. Samuel Jay and Mrs. Benjamin Jay of Fanning- brook, and one brother Samuel D. of Charlottetown. Half a century of service in the former Methodist Church, and the United Church of Canada was ter- minated with his death. In both churches he held oflices of respon- sibility. _ At the time of the con- summation of Union he was ap- pointed to the eldership of the Mount Stewart United Church, and served wisely and well until the end. The funeral service was held from his late residence and was con- ducted by his pastor, Rev. M. K. Charman, who spoke feelingly from the words, His servants shall serve Him, and they shall see His face, and His name shall be in their fore- heads.” The whole country side attended the funeral, for the deceased was a general favorite of all. He was a man without an enemy. His sunny and cheerful personality will be greatly missed. He was laid to rest in the People's Cemetery, Mt. Stewart, beside an tears stand." The following were the floral of- Pillow~—Family. Wreaths—P. J. McDonald and Crescents-Rev. M. K. and Mrs. Sprays-Stella Dirt, Jack and DUNCAN MATHEBON On March 5th, 1933, at the home “(inf Q annular More.» a aaAn-r neuron» IAIWINKQ-lfl‘! CHAPTER III. "oh, sure I do! I reed it in a paper," she said. beslnnina on h" own milk, and talklfl! thnnANhI or around, the straws. “You have to eat iron and starch and-and fos- ters," she said, somewhat uncertain of the last word. “pm, and starch and-what?" he asked, fishing for the extraordinary word. But she would not be baited. “All sorts oi things," she said ev- asively. "These sandwiches are tuna fish and egg-they're always the ones that are left. We never Set the chicken or ham ones, but we don't care, do we?" she ended‘ a little anxiously. "I don't!" Joe said, ravenous. “How'd you happen to find this place?" he asked, approving of it. "I was after some ideels in our basement," she said. “An' I seen this winder. Ain't it nice in here?" "You were after some what?" he interrupted. "Some ideels. Some of them little ‘well, sorter prayers they have all coloured up, on cards," Maggie ex- plainead. "Like ‘No man is useless while he has a friend,’ an’ ‘To earn a little, to spend a little less,’ an’ ‘There's so much good in the worst of us,’ " she went on. But at such lightning speed that Joe could not make a beginning or an end to what she said. He burst out laugh- ing. “You laugh like you were much older than you are," said Maggie, struck with some sudden suspicion. “I'm almost twenty," Joe said. “Why—how old did you think I was?" “I thought you was a kid," Mag- gle said frankly. "That's," she end- ed innocently, "thats why I sorter took an interest in you." "How old are you?" Joe count- ered. "Are you thirteen?" "Thirteen!" she echoed, affront- ed. "I've been working four years. I'll be eighteen my next birthday. I was seventeen last Valentine's Dayl" And suddenly both were embar- rased, and they stopped talking, in some confusion of spirit. "But when I first went to work," Maggie resumed, “I was awful little. I opened a door an’ checked um- brellas. You'd wonder they let me in at all. Three dollars a week, they paid me." “Pretty tough!" Joe commented sympathetically. “Oh, I've had my share!" she ro- sponded. “We ought to have some- thing green with this," said Mag- gie again, extending toward him s. fresh supply of the broken biscuits. “Where'd you get all this diet stuff?” Joe. asked. diverted. "Oh," she flashed carelessly, “the evenin‘ papers has it, always, a health column." “But you don't believe all you see in the papers!" Joe teased. "I do some things." Maggie countered uncertainly, after a mo- ment's thought. “And do you do all the things the DBPWS 5R? to do?" Joe asked. "I'm doin’ one now," she ans. wered, moving only her Mpg, "rm relaxin’. Relax ten minutes am;- meals, if you're thin. Stand if you're fat. Exercises every mornln'-" "We have twelve minutes," Joe said, glancing at his wrist. "And do you believe all the ideal cards, too?" he pursued. "How do you mean?" she 85140.1, "Well, don't they all have rules for life on them?" Joe suggested, " ‘Lest we forget,’ and ‘I am the captain 0! my soul,’ and. all that?" "Was you readin’ them today?" she asked, surprised. "No. But I know um; 31nd o; stuff!" " ‘Let us then be up an’ doin',"' Maggie was murmuring, n5 1g Sh, heard the words m the first time, found him clear in thought and in. terested in current events. A 5mm time before his departure he grew rapidly weaker and passed pegge- S75-2-8-1month. if. It. Bell Money to Loan Charlottetown. 1 B. A., LL. B. Money to Ma Kcnsingfon given the very best attention. BELL 8e MATHIESON D. L. Mathleson, L.L.D. Barristers a. Solicitors Cameron Block, ChariottctownJlEJ. Prohibition Commission Chas. H. Black. Chairman, Jan. B. iifcDnnald, West St. Peters John Simpson, Hamilton. Send all information regarding infractions of PIIOHIBITION ACT J. W. MacNAUGHT Barrister. Solicitor. &~c. ll i _-a of Alfred Cameron, South Mel- ville, P. E. Island, Duncan Mathea- on passed away at the advanced age of eighty-nine years. He was a son of the late Duncan Matheson and Mary (MacNeiil) Matheson and was born at DeSablo in this province. l-fe was the last survivor of a family of fourteen. He mar- rled Miss Sarah Cameron, of Al- bany who predeceased him. Over twenty years ago Mr. Mathesm suffered a breakdown in health and hnd been confined to his bed for a great part of the time. During these last twenty-four years of his life his m‘nd seemed to grow in brlghircs; but his body remained wcnk. lie rcqulrcd mlrh attnton which llC received f'<m 11's devot- cd wie and after her death from Mrs. C‘m'§‘0'1 and other members. of thc lzomc. Tease win visiecl him fully away. He was a devout mom. ber of the church of smumd m this province and when able was regularly present at the services in De8wble Kirk. His father was one of the first group of elders ordain. ed by the late Rev. Donald Mac- Donald to assist him in his miss- ionary work here. The funeral was held on ‘rues- day March 7th. Interment was in Argyle Shore Cemete y. Rev. Ewen MacDougall conducted the services a; the house and graveside. The roads were in bad condition but a goodly number attended to pay a lest tribute of rcspwt to their aged friend. The pail bearers were. 14pm; I-fggins, James Flood, James Mathsscn, Frncls Bradley, Walter B-er and Neil Cameron. " ‘Laugh, an‘ the world laughs with you!“ W KATHLEEN N RI$ ugh’ 39gb, it makes m6 I10! It my IIDIDMIII“ Joe slid faintly, bl- tween a llillh "14 I 37°“- mggie laughed, puzzled but sym- pathetic. "It sorter doesn't mean any- mmg," she conceded. "But the ‘Si sezaes‘ are funny," she submitted doubtfully. ' "The whats?" "The ‘Si sezzes'—we cell them that," she elucidated. "They all be- gin, ‘Si Scz.’ " "Bunk!" Joe commented disgust- edly. ' She was staring at him, faintly suspicious. "Joe," she begun after a moment, "is this your first lob?" “What. makes you think it isn't?" he partied. “Becauz-—becauz fellers of nine- teen don't usually begin on what you're doin,’ stockroom work," said Maggie, " specially when. they talk like you do." "I worked on a farm awhile," Joe said. “And I travelled with a circus and worked in a bicycle shop," he added imaginatively. Maggie was satisfied. She revert- ‘ ed to a more interesting topic. “My mother says that all that newspaper stuff about budgets and systems and all that is the bunk," she offered. “My sister has to keep her hands white becauz she demon- strates a beauty cream, and my mother don't get round much." "But my mother don't like Liz to use make-up-and she won't let me cut my hair-she says it ain't lady- like for girls to bob their hair." "Father living?" Joe asked. She hesitated. "My father's a-a wonderful man. Yes, he living." “What's his profess-what's he do?" Joe asked. “Hwhek a travellln‘ man." Some- how she wanted Joe to admire Pop. “And‘ my mother's-fleshy," said Maggie delicately. “Well, I'll tell you one thing," said Joe, as they began to gather up the signs of their feast and pre- pare to return upstairs to the store, "I'll tell you one thing-I wouldn't like your sister.” "Oh, Joe, why not!" “I don't know. I just know that. And here's another thing, that budget and _, ‘ and --‘-" ‘ talk is all true." “Maggie's beautiful eyes widened almost as if in pain. "Oh, Joe, I don't believe it!" she said again. He was cross. "All right, don't believe it. But what do you think the newspapers print it for?" "You mean so much for grocer- ies and amusements and clothes and dentists?" she demanded, ar- resting him with a small clutching hand on his arm. "Certainly!" She seemed to droop. "My mother'd never do it, though! She hates managing." “Well, because your mother wouldn't do it, Maggie," he said un- pleasantly, “doesn't make it less true, does it?" “No," she said sadly, briefly, And Joe suddenly felt ashamed of him- self. He gave her a steadying hand as they scrambled back through the two windows, and over the bales and boxes in their own basement, just in time to hear the gong emit its sharp double ring. But once flsoln in the mar and rush of the store upstairs, he noted that she _did not quite restore him to the fa. miller footing upon which he ma been before. At ten o'clock two old women, "med With Pails and mops, made "161! Blilleflrflnce far at the back of the store, and purchasers began to take on a slightly apoiogem now Then, suddenly, a gong struck, and a hundred saleswomen were 18-111mm; through the black back P888889. Poet the enormous service “elm”? m?" the Wet street. Joe, Hworins inward a heap of rubbish that was advancing steamy ahead of a charwomanh wide broom, pick- "! wmelhlfll 11D and out through the crowd to follow the sudden m. tle coated figure that was Maggie Johnson. i END PAIN — Soothe SORE HANDS byRubbingin t"? LINIMEN THAT TFE PEOPLE MAY KNOW (Aeoluannalluteteatteall recotdingaeeeptcl factaanl pfnlollregardlng mpeognaaofthacampaignfoe 5"!!!“ world.) {Sponsored by - the Grand Dlvhien. lone of Temperance of the Prince Edward XIII-WI mind" ltifle Alecia-Hon will b0 bold ‘I u" Board of ‘Irade Boolnl. “with! nub,‘ u, “u, my, at the hour II 1M P. M. “n Beoeivllll nlwrfl "4 "m" ' new Council. N m‘ con H. M, DAVISO | ' t England and Wales drank more quarts of beer than of milk last year. Farmers received from their milk the sum of 82 million pounds. The contribution of the brewing trade to the farmer's income did not ' exceed 4 million pounds. m milk trade was worth eight times as much to the farmer as the brewing trade, and eighty times as much to the citizen! A Bad Investment Great Britain in spite of depres- sion and unemployment still spends over a Billion Dollars in intoxicat- ing drinks, an average of more than $25.00 per year for every man, wo- men and child. A careful estimate for one large industrial borough in- dicated an expenditure of $75.00 per annum for every adult over 20 years of age. It sounds incredible. It is both irrational and immoral. Tea to Oust Teddy In India, in the native Stale of Hyderabad, the ruling Prince with the co-operatlon oi his President and finance Minister and an Eng- lish Missionary, has taken practical steps to combat the drink menace, and a chain of tea shops are being opened within a few yards of toddy booths. Attractive tables will be laid out and free tea will be sup- plied when asked for, in the hope of oombatting the drink evil. The treasury receives a million pounds revenue annually from the drink traffic, but in the desire for the moral uplift of his people the na- tive Prince will spend 50,000 pounds cash in the effort to stop the drink habit. The resulting loss of revenue will be more than compensated by the gain in manhood. Some Can- adian rulers might take a lesson. Still Another Plan Musolini, himself a total abstain- cr, and an enemy of the drink habit. is conducting through the Italian press a. campaign in favor of whole meal bread, with itsabundance of vitamins and essential phosphates. The lack of these drives many workers instinctively to the danger- ous ‘ ‘ , This is a new way of getting a whack to lvlir. Barleycorn. Losing Caste Clipped from a wine merchant's letter: “Thirwen years ago one could say with pride and with honor that one was a. wine merchant. Today, if one says that, one is branded bootlegger, gangster, and racketeer." Bless him who mu. "The Trade" a whack, Bidewise, in front, or in the back. NOT PARADISE YET Quebec is supposed to be the moderationists paradise. The stronger liquors are sold under rutrictions. Beer and wine are more openly and fully available. The contention is that as a result, beer drinking takes the place of distilled liquors and is itself non- intoxicating. Here the drink prob- lem is being solved. Recently the Christian Science Monitor noted for the accuray of its news columns, has a series of articles giving the impressions of a. visit to Montreal by “Phiting Williams. "internationally known student of the worker and his prob- lems." His evidence is startling, even shocking, in its revelation of the consequences of drinking beer. drunkenness accompanied by and promoting sexual vice. These selec- tions tel! of conditions in Mon- treai, not in Mcscow. " . . . .I stepped from the po- lite heights of club and office down onto the level of living traversed not by the down-and-out but by 9!! per cent or more of Montreal's citizens. . . . In Montreal the closing of the sit down beer ta- verns at ll p. m. means the open- ing of the wlne-and-beer serving eafel . . .. In all of these cafes the scene is much the scum-a floor full of sznall tables silt-round- iifiiii. néiiifié" Residential Sites ‘ In Brighton FOR SALE Apply To V. S. SNALLNOIIII I22 North River Road li<$Ji%i-2%li$2~i$;i§ " " I‘ I cuss. man. M‘- 001» caurmos ‘ we-a-is-al. Milk or Beer '10 TATIDO POULTRY mmrmw. N- J- MW 9-403” _A taflgolng system already used on special breeds o: poultry 1n Canada is belns sronlwrefi 1°)’ 5°11‘ oral use in New Jersey by the State police. Poul"? "m" Wm I” urged w purchase tattooins equiv- ment and search their relllslffllmn numbers on the under side of the left wing of the bird with 8- 39w‘ 151 pronged instrument which has been daubod with tattooing ink. Colonel Norman Schwarzkopf. superintendent of state police. ex- plained the tattooing would aid in return to owners of hlcltefll 1011116 in distant parts of the state. 111 checking thefts and sales to mar- kets in New York and Philadelphia and in rapid identification when birds were found under suspicious circumstances. HEART srlrolmn ma WILL naoovan CHICAGO, May l0——Ten stitches were taken in the heart of Leroy Millinder, negro, and twice during the operation his heart stopped beating, but tonight he was appar- ently well on the way to recovery- Millnder was wounded when re- sisting a holdup. His assailant drove an inch and a quarter knife into his heart. Dr. George L. Dav- enport, who performed the oper- ation, said Millinderb heart beats were restored by massaging. BANK NOTE ‘l0 YEARS OLD PRINCE AIBERT, Sask. -In a fine state of preservation a. 70-year- old note of the private banking house of Macarthur and Knowles of Prince Albert, Northwest 'I‘erri- tories, has been found here. ed by a ring of half-partitioned “cablnets" for greater privacy, with some tables occupied solely by young men, others by young men and young women, while at still others young women wait lo be invited to the table of the new- comers. In a word what looks like a restaurant is in reality nothing but a wine and beer saloon fre- quented almost exclusively by street walkers and their customers and "prospects." . . . . They have provided for the woman a. standing and a plat~ form such as she would find it dif- ficult otherwise to obtain. They have, that is, enabled her to Pal’ ID the cafe proprietor what can PET‘ fectly appropriately be called her rent—he'r "office" rent- . . . Se- condly, the wine or beer (wine and beer are said to work faster) pro- ceed to induce the atmosphere of initial oasy-Efililflfleis and M" befuddlement deemed helpful to the acceptance of the younB W0- man's proposals, not only of more and more drinkfi. but 815° I’! 5 short walk-“just around the cor- ner." In certain other cafes, some of them highly popular with the qugsu '-‘ young women of the city and amazingly open and fe- cognlzed by the entire population. the elevator makes unnecessary even the necessity of putting on ones hat. . . . Nowhere on the Continent (of Europe) can the visitor encounter many or such open, near-by and accessible es- tablishments, nor—-and this is the point-any that thus flourish with the direct help of lows alleged to represent a. cool, calm, well-studied effort to control liquor and pro- mote temperance. . . . (The coh- trol plan) certainly does not avail to keep numerous drunken men of! the streets of the worker districts or off the tavern {loom 1101' 6 shocking number of scores and hundrtds of befuddled Y0“!!! mm away from the wine table of the pamted woman." "Drink carefully, but don't set dmnk," says Moderation. Result: Saloon and. Brothel in ‘as- sociatlon. Maritime Summer School SACKVILLE, N. B. TUIIIYSTAUGUST 18 Write for descriptive bulletin to GEORGE J. TBUIMAN, M.A. Ph.D., Sacivllle, New Brunswick. comforts. If a person cellent food, he can Edward." WONDERFUL MOTHER 0F MINE Tonight, I am lonely, yes lonely for W". As I watch the moon-decline; Prom my heart flows a love-may it ever be true To you, dear old mother of mine. Your care and affection so kindly bestowed Since the days of "Auld Long Sync," Has siivered each dark cloud and lighted life's road, < 0h, wonderful mother of mine! When false friends condemned me and turned from my door You came to my aid every time; So you are the one I shall always adore, g Oh, wonderful mother of mine! Chorus: And I know that you love me and care for mo’ now. As you did in the sweet days of old- When you racked me to sleep; and covered my brow‘ With your kisses more precious than gold. "rho faded your beauty that once wasso fair, Your love like the stars ever shine: And in deepest devotion, I offer this prayer: God bless you, dear mother 0f mine! "I wouldn't stay anywhere bu: at the King Elimar " says A PROMINENT TRADE COMMISSIONER “When I'm in Toronto, that’: my hotel. I've travelled pretty well around the world, and l ought to know hotel service and amount of attention, quiet luxury and ex- King Edward rates are scaled in keeping with the times-rooms as low in price as $2.50. Yet there is never a slackening in our conscientious efforts to make your my with no supremely enjoyable. -—F. H. MacArthur, '5 wants just the right get i: at the King P. KIRBYHUNT Manager Dalhousie Prize List HALIFAX, May 114mm Thomas Donald, of Malpeque, p, E. I., was awarded the University medal in law, and divided honon with Julius Rosenblum of Giau Bay for the third year Carswell prize, according to announcemeul at Dalhousie Law School today. Prince Edward Island graduate in Law included Mr. Donald ant Albert James Haslam. HALIFAX, May ll-J. D. Red- dln of Charlottetown was wardsi the Frank Woodbury Memorial Prize (Thesis) in Dentistry at Dai- hous'e University, according we announcement by the facuii. .0- day. Mr. Reddin is a member of tho graduating class. BLOOD-RED RAIN FALLS OVER LAKE GARDA AREA AND SCIENTISTS PUZZLE]! GAIRDONE, Italy, May ia-Ahsil hour uownpour of a blood-red rain here and over Lake Gerda isle io- day puzzled ‘ ‘ . They linked it with the same phenomenon caused by showers o! mud and ashes over Rome and Naples yesterday, but Director Mal- ladra of the Vesuvius Observlttorl said a heavy wind had caught up ashes from the volcano and camel them over a. wide area. Others said the mud may have resulted from winds which picked up sand in Af- rica which later became mixed with Lorne Valley. rain. 0hariottetownAlonlen-Summerside V Leaves Summerside 8.00A.M. v- 1, Illzrlvel cvfiafildxxwn . 11.00 A. M. 15 aves ar o wn 2.00 P. M. Arrives Summerside .. . 5.00 P. M. BOrden I 1 BURDEN —- BUMMERSIDE SCHEDULE D , Leaves Borden ........ 7.00A.M. 9.00 A. M. 4.00121“. Arrives Borden ...... 9.00 A. M. 4.00 P. M. 8.00 P. M. SUNDAY AND WEDNESDAY TRIPS DY ARRANGEMENT. crumu nus srnwc: BETWEEN Daily Except Sunday and Wednesday. Above Schedules in effectnntii further notice. Terminus < F‘ ' tielown Borden Summeraldb 4 Boomerang Service Sta. Ahegwelt Hotel Olympic Call i 9447-5-13-81. i- i — i‘ Fire, Life, Accident, Sickness E. R.BROWA and Plate Glass Insurance at Lowest Rate. Agent at Summerside, Lloyd Lewis 146 Richmond St., Charlottetowfl