,PAGF1.'.1IV!9__ 1 ~.=..1o-'ii~.=ci;i'.;ll""i1Fl‘. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN .. tel“, I ,Woman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal “allicishions -:- Literature ANUARY s,_19aa BEEF INTO YOII r By Jlari Jfoore. Specially contributed IO-TIIC Guardian for Guardian (By Mary Moore) Imp"! RIM ln Tempting DNIII Before nt-‘.'."'..‘,\' sen-ling .1 tllblicfll’ , li-tit-it- to 111“ con-posing i-uoni, may- be 1-011 can imagine vagucly- the Dl'(‘lil1‘.llill1‘_\' testing and tfistillg and, approiliig 911:1 ii :curiii ,1; and‘ ftliringiii: cf 11111111., '40 iuili on among we Wutllill Iii t 1' kit-i theiis. Rlcc is" our victim this tl111c—‘ B h Guiana riea- 111 11.11"! i"illfll',-- i. [lid cur rilsctiit-rii-s :i-.'t- got 2 i 1 1111- pi-al ,tl'(l11§ll§' 3o ti1t-11"v ‘not: wives as wt ll 11s to ‘tlioisc -.\ho llll\'f‘ a nose for fine food. We have been singing {he praises of’ brown, uiipoiislicil rice 1'01" i\ long‘. tine, until noii- 1 doubt that Liv-so‘ urc- any renders of IiIiS 11211;.- wiir) have LOOTPMI of it at least oncc. Now we want to bring to your at- tention British (illiflllfl rec 'l'lil.-; puvtliul "1i-.ti' b-uli-il" by hlPiiliR of :4 sh- t i llPiilllllll 11in- mess. --'l‘i1e results ni Seirntlfc (1:- perlments fumish the reason whv PRYbOllQd r'ee is more nutritious than ordinari- u-iiitc ‘.'l(‘i‘_ since tho 11i':-1-i-.~f:11_-; fat" ' (il-clti-ir-l i111‘. ‘when l; 11.1111. oti. tiio i‘fl(|t)$‘ frrm absorbs vitamin I31 at the ex- pens: of the germ and pcrlcarp ‘- (outer coatl, and nilllnr: (lo-rs not. 1‘i"‘.l‘.0\'f‘ the 111111111, Pl-rv.--11l:_0ro11s fonuvuiids. riiiftzsc ‘ha-u h thr‘ ll Z1 Slil ‘ 111.'\ll11t‘l‘. I11 Gill?!‘ . s, the pru-bliling process. as it wore, nos-hrs in the dcrirablc pro- r: v11 f1 are not tiim i-rniov- 111 1.1111 1 11d 11011 " Aii-itliir ‘\i':i .11 111ml 41-1-1111113; rough, and htnd our interest. so 1 (vie of our Canadian importers 1hr- rice and 1v" the and (111 .. ' z w weir‘, curious '\tvr"see"'huw"it "boiled; . . fdfpffelll‘? Ince of boiled rfc" being oi para- mount importance. Built-d liriti-li (iuiiiiui 1111-0 lfsiicg eight llilll‘> z‘;- niucli ivatcr Is rice-l-2 cup rice to 4 cups wa- Canadian Cookery .For Oamriczclicilz Women Readers. find n beautifully flaky pot full of l’it'l3——‘..‘2lC11 flak: .\1l0'i‘.'y u-hite, bold and separate, that needs only the addition of melted butter to make i: a perfect vegetable. Use 1t in plaec of’ potatoes. As n11 accompan- imvgt to roast bei-f, o1‘ steak or roe. t 111mb it is llllSLlFpllSSCil 111 (ic- liciuiiiit-sis. '1'h,. Sci-ring 0f rice 1ilniii as descrbcd above is the most severe test to which it can be put and our British Guiana rice cer- luitily excels. We should have mentioned it b!" fore biit no doubt it has oecurre-i to you that the 1111rchase of Blit- lsh Guiana rice gives you a-Jotlier t111poriii11'ty to help along the cai-rc of mills-h Empire Aliu-keting. In our ice box thci-c is i1. special space kept for a tall white enamel pitcher \\'lll(‘ll will liolri about two quarts 211111 lll 1t \\"1‘ keep ou1"'.~_o11p 111-.11"11 i." V"z_:t-lal)l-- \\'1fll‘1‘.\', iumit juices. left over lwiies, cleaned ee- lci-y tops, etc, etc, and one roon it. ivzis emptied into a large kettle. brought. to lauiling twiiit and 1-4 (-1111 llritsli (iuitiiin rice \\'il.\‘ zitldt-(I. Wt- allu-Jc-id it lo boil iuifil the rice was tender. The resulting soup has not yet been named but the ricc gave the llquld that certain snio ' so cli-slrziblr- ‘I11 Wllflt w. , _ ..il!y 11111-11 i, is tht. main‘ rout-so at luiiciil anti ziiade 1i nutri- tious enough to “stand by" us for the afternoon sess‘on of rice ex- l)“l'l1llf"ii1l§0l1. iThat. “stand by" exprQsslOll bvloiius cxcluswely t0 :\1i rftl glICilt iilicle of 01111, ‘who will never lct any one leave his house in the country without serv- 111g them a cup of tea to "stand by" them lei" the (il'l\'C home) Trims no‘. rte:- puclcliir: loeieally conic next‘? We used the simple rc- cipe "but ‘ch’: exceptional ' rice "pro" duced a superbr pudding. Rice Pudding tor-add l tcaspron gnlt to water - yoitit, ‘ rust-r 111.. allow-lug water to stop boffng and boil for five minutes. Then place in: ton or double boir-r and cool: ultlr, m1: stiniiio uiiiil lcizalwr. You willl SCB5pOOn sblt, 1-3 cup gugar, grated rind and juice from one- hali‘ l’.1‘.Ol1. iilix all ingredients a <1 pour 1l‘.t0 buttcrcd baking (fish, “- IH 1x111 of hot ivatcr and oven 01'" 300 dvc. Fania. sui- IJmPs durinK first hour of cooking lo yrcvriit rice settling. i Dorothy Dix’ Letter Box Most Contemptible Man on Earth is Employer Who Makes Familiarities Price of Girl's Job. Rat Poison Best Cure for. Grafting Friends! Deni‘ Miss Dix-Is there anything that can be done to make ers malice that their lovemaking fr not attractive to their stenographera? Virtually every man, especially those past 40, think that a girl should take their foolish advances as a. part of her job, and ff she draws buck or shows what she really thinks oi him she _wlll be given notice very quickly. Even when a girl lets him hold her hand and kiss her, doesn't the poor sap realize that lhe fa only doing Why can't men TCLlIlZQ that the modern gfrl takes her position ser- ii. to hold her job mid keep alive? iously and would like her employer he does his men employee? speaking from experience. 111g me into a Al1S\\'Cl‘Z I thiuk that iil:.,.11utcly the most COllLilllpifblC man on earth fa the one who takes advantage of his position and of a girl's necessity to force hi3 attentions 1111011 1101'. lie knows that her job is all that stands between her and the street 11nd starvation, Iii thousands of cases he knows that she is the only breadwuuici- in the family. and that there are other: dependent upon A sick mother. must go hungry" and cold but. for the thin pay envelope that she brings in every Saturday" night. Hc knows that her love for her people, her pity for them, her sense of obligation to them, make her as helpless as a She cannot resent the insults that would mean her dis- missul from hcr situation at a time when work is difficult to get. her. An old fzithcr. bird in d. trap. It is a hard thing for any young lliirtlcr still for her to have to bear on her slim young shoulders the bur- Hard for her to have to work and be denied the vie-wines that belong to the short Playtime of a woman's life. You den of her fainiilys support. would think that ivlien a mun saw a. luau and trying to make an honest llvlng and keep herself clean and fine, that l1. would arouse his admiration and appeal to some chivalry in even tlu- most. hOlTlld soul and that he would help her along the way instead of frying to pull her down into a pit. But only too often this does not | “PM “lllllwlfrfi 11ml’ 011 the Kir-‘s who are in their offices and make their ilfCUlltilllCl.‘ of their familiar tics the And the curious part of it ls thatthese men who thrust their odious kisses on girls and paw them with their repulsive hands so often have daughters of their own that they adore ‘and try to protect. One wonders if they l1i:\'(.‘l' think that; some day their girls may have to earn their liv- int; iii sonic minis office and that they do not treat every girl who works for them as they would want some other man to treat their daughters. That these beasts can ever be changed is past hoping. nothing of tenderness 01- pity or manhood or reverence for innocence in 111cm, and so there is nothing to which a girl can appeal. tit-fend herself 11s best she can until solely. But it is a cruel thing when a girl has to defend 1101' honor with one hand ii-liilc she works with the other, sary, will certainly occupy the hottest. coming to him. Dear ML: Dix-I am a young man of 20, making a fairly nice salary and have great ambitions in life. I Wlllll, to got imirricd, but lots of my friends tell me that I would make a Four c1111; milk, 1-3 Cup mo, 1-3 career first. Also, that I should be able to give a wife all the necessities But I think a woman should be content to share a man's pov- Thfs girl is willing to do this, yet I am per- of life. erty e swell as his riches. plexcd about what to do. Answer: If you nre ambitious to succeed, three until you are more firmly on your feet before you take unto yourself u. You remember that Kipling said that “he travels the fastest who wife. I am a young woman My boss is fast chang- LIAN-HATER. For, fortunately, the majority of employers are genetlemen who treat the girls who work for them with as much consideration ns they would the members oi their own families. MORSE’S STAN-D-ARD TEA STILL SETS THE PACE FOR QUALITY IN IT'S PRICE CLASS firm: GOOD OLD FAMILY rm or ma MARITIMES to treat her as Little brothers and sisters who girl to have to earn her own living. young girl gallantly shoulderlng her happen. Only too often fat, middle- condftlon of holding their jobs. They have She can only she can get away to some place of and the mun who makes this neces- grld in torment when he gets what's DOROTHY DIX. am in love with s. girl of 21 and we G. S. Q. I would certainly advise you to wait great mistake l! I did. that; I am very young and should establish my travels alone,’ and there is no denying that a wife ls a heavy burden on {I the back of a. man who has just got his foot on the first rung of the lad- der nnd who desires to climb to the top. You see, son, the door of opportunity rarely opens except to a golden key. A man must have a little money saved up in order to take advan- tage of the chances that come his way. He must have some money saved up before he even dares give up a poor job or an uncongenfal one in which he knows hc will never be able to do his best work in order to look for a better one. But how can he save up anything if he marries while he is still n boy on a small salary. Every penny must; go for the support of the family. Nor is thc married man free to take the risks that a single man is. Marriage has put. out the fire of ambition in muny s man's soul and nailed many a man of genius to a clerk's stool for the balance of his life. 0f course every worth-while woman is willing to endure hardships with her husband and to work shoulder to shoulder with hlm, but for a marriage to be successful there must be a margin of safety. In spite of what two romantic young people think, love seldom survives hunger and cold and the racking anxiety of those who llve in constant dread of the landlord and of the grocer refusing them any more credit. Under such circumstances a man does. not see his wife as the angel of his dreams. Hc-ls more upt to look upon her as the author of his mis- fortunes and think that ff he had not married he would not be reduced to such a sorry plight. At 20 you are too young to marry, anyway. Nor do I think that at that or any other age a man has a. right to marry o. woman unless he can at. least. assure her of bread and cheese and kisses. Bo my advice to ypu fa to wait until you can afford to marry. If you and the girl do not love each other enough for your affection to stand a little waiting, it certainly would never stand the strain of poverty. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Miss Dfx—I am afflicted with a lot of parasitic friends. They invade my place of business and my home. They wish themselves upon mc for Sunday dinner. They walk in unasked whenever they dis- cover I am having guests. They pry into my private business. They chisel, cheat, snoop. gossip, intrude, slander and irritate m8 bBYOIId Words- What can I do to get rid of them? PERPLEXED. Answer: It seems as ff you would be driven to using rough on rats on them, and even then they would probably dlc about the house. 'I'l1c meanies? How to get rid of the grafters, who under the sacred name of friend- ship prey upon one, fa Indeed u. difficult problem, because having no sense of decency and so sensltiveness and only using one for their awn gain they are impervious alike to hints and insults. You can kick them out of the door, but like hungry dogs, they will conic back as soon as they smell food on the table. ' The only way b0 get rid of suwh pests is to shut off the source of supply. Quit lending them money. Quit gfvfngwhem food and drink when they come to your house. Refuse to lend them your car, and when they crash lri on your parties tell them franklyJhey were notexpectcd. As soon as they flnd. that you refuse to b eheld up any longer they will go where the pickings are better. DOROTHY DIX. Hr. W. G. Simpson, Slril, on‘: writuz-"For two you! I wI-l troubled with IGVQR headaches, 4nd pains in my rtomach. My drnggist told mo to take Burdock Blood Bitters, and since then I have not. boon troubled with either. Each Ipring I find n bottle of B.B.B.iljun the thingtocleuitho blood of the poison: , “ ’ in the lyutem during the winter months.” rnlnuhzhmd m u» 1-1-1 5! mu, only Buunocii — Broom. i BITTERS 1P1- kutulltlrugand floral; hdhfflllflrurnllo. 11L, m», 0n!- Bu Ann Bus‘: m elegant dsyflmo dram that meets princol llnu, l0 kind- ff you're l woo blt heavy. It. has a smart rover collar that eiiends almost to the waistline, which has a tendency to diminish bulk. The curved hfp lemming la very alenderlzlng and length giving. This model is very attractfw in black rough crepe or crfnkly crepe satin with white contrast. Sheer woolen: are also suitable. The lower miniature back view shows a narrow belt provided for by pattern, if you prover same. Style No. 302 is designed for sizes 18, 18, 20 years, 86, 8B, 40, 43, 44 and 46 inches bust. Sine 36 require: 8% yards 39-inch with it. yard 39-inch contracting. Price of Pattern 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin la preferred). Wrap coin carefully. N0. 303. S110 ......-.----,..---." '"""""飣é;£'ji&i{;;§"""" ' ..éit.y.. ........ ... ........ . ..é£;£°... A Mo rn ingSm ile The following story about the Prince of Wales comes from Aus- tralia: The Prince was riding un- attended outsldc of Melbourne when his saddle-girth broke, and while hc was trying to fix ft a gentleman rode up and dismounted. Nothing the accent of the young rider, the stranger said: "You are from Eng- land?” " "Yes." "And may I ask your name?" "I am the Prince of Wales. May I enquire who I have to thank for this service?" "Oh, me?” came the unhesltat- lng answer, “Im his dad." On the following evening there was b. fete given in Melbourne. The Prince was ‘there and among the guests he noticed the stranger of the roadl Pushing his way through the elite, Eddie advanced with a smile and an outstretched hand. "Hello dad!" he sold. 4.. For The Cook-- STUFFED ONIONS Pin-boll four large Bermuda on- ons in salted water for fifteen minutes. Scoop out, the rnfddlec and chop flne. Mix this with two cups 3f baked poi-k and beans (No. 1 can) which have been seasoned to taste with either catsup or chili sauce. Bake the stuffed onions with a 1ft- tle water and bacon drfPWIB in B- lVhat the Fashionables are Wearing abcllc Worthington l Faliiciilicit). Then remove the cover, lay a strip of bacon, cut ln two, over each onion and bake until the bacon is crisp. Allow om onion for each serving. SCALLOPED SWEETBREADS Two cupa cooked, diced celery, two cups chopped cooked sweet- breads, one cup thin cream, one cup milk, thrcc tablespoons flour, three. tablespoons butter, one tea- spoon onion juice, one teaspoon mushroom catsup, two dashes of cayenne, half teaspoon salt, With the cream, milk, butter and flour make a cream sauce. When thick, add salt and other season- ing, then sweetbreads and celery. , Put either in a. baking dish or; rameklns, dust with buttered bread crumbs and brown quickly. This will make six servings. IRRITABLE? Take Lydia E. Plnkhlm’! Vegetable Compound It nteadlcn the nerves and help to build you up. You will cat bot- terunlcep lantern-look bot- tu. Life will 00cm worth llvlnj again. Remember that 9| out of I00 women may, "It lulpo mo)‘. covered pan for twenty-five minu- tes, in a moderate oven (350 degrees Let it help you too. Liquid or tb- let form, as you er. »v~~~@¢no_' 0o>o++o+00+oo i EYES TESTED t AND l: GLASSES FITTED g E .1. s. TAYLOR ‘ B. w. TAYLOR I § u~$h$"" * ~ 1e nd street ¢ +++o+o+o404+¢>¢>o++040 F“ Professional Bards Stewart & Lowther ’ .1. n. srlswunr, K. c. N. W. LOWTUER. J IABBISTERS, soucrrons, nc 84 Great George Street MONEY ‘r0 1.01m McLEOD 81 BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Banister and Altorncy-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN Office: I80 Richmond Street IA. MacDonald, K.O. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR. mi. Riley Building Charlottetown, I‘. E. Island. - Mom-v u) Loan and Collections . given the very bcs! attention. 575-2-6-lmonth. BELL &. MATHIESON R, ll. Bell D. L. Mathicson, LLD. Barristers & Solicitors Money tn Loan Charlottetown and nlnnfaguc ll. E MacPilEE, B.A. EJRRISTER. SOLICITOR NOTARY. &c., Riley Building. 576-2-8-1 month. Charlottetown. _ Came by night, breukfastcd in 14m. ASllESof ROSES A Romance of Today By Joanna Cannan Christmas came. John 511mm" 11nd instinctual his sou to spcutl 11m hmldily at home, and in Litter wea- ther Geoffrey travelled south. Hg don, and travelled down to Hem- shutf. in the morning. ‘flu-rt; 11,111 been u sharp frost, the fret-s and the fields and the hedges u-cre white with rfme, but it was good to be in the Thames Valley agajm After his weeks of exile, the pretti- ness of tho sheltered country seems to welcome 111m iii the same way m: the cockncy humour of the Pad- dington porters, and the 1151x1195 of the s1zitituis-~Maideiihead, llv-nlcy, Puugboiiriie-iili eloquent of 1110 pleasures and the lllkiyilillCs of the laughter-loving south, John Uilnioui" ivtis in gciiiul or steal some. Everyone’: going! You must come!" The breathless invitation took Geoffrey buck to Christmas holidays in flic old, Arcadian world. He rushed away to tell his father and to hunt, for his skates. Half-an-hour inter he was sitting 0n the grass at the edge of the frozen lake and pulling 011 his skating boots, the scene was i1 pleasant one. There were many people skating villagers, county people and townsfolk from Reading: and the whlrr of the skates ivas 21s exhilerziting as the iiiic frosty 1111'. Geoffrey had lied his bootlziccs and was about; to struggle to his feet, when he saw Patricia. skating toward; him. "Hui-lo, Pat!" “Ilul-lo, Geoffrey! Come along, the icc is marvellous." They skated away down the lake together. Neither of them was an adept, but both could keep going. People who kncw them smiled. Whenever thcrc hid been any fce ln tluit part of the country, Patricia. Ly-sai-de and Geoffrey Gllmour had always skated together. mood. l-le had haul Llll excellent rc- port [r0111 rclitibii; Mr, Aiiilcizsoii us‘ to the ability and i11il1:.»,t1'y ut ]1i,§| c011. 'll1e fir.» tjliristiini.» Wiilltlilt- 111:, wife was ncceswariiy- .1 11101311-, 9110111 occasion, but lie C-Jllnillnlly-j reminded himself lllill 1'. u-ng 111;, duty, for (lcoiirt-yk" 2.111;’; -_., kcu" n11 llll :i111it-:11'.iiir_-,- of ilu-i rlul11o.-..».. 1111:; duty 11c found si1i'111'1.-,111-_-l_v His sister, Aliiliciiit, Lliinitiur, v ., iui t-xeeurnt cliiiit-l:ii;ii~z .'.11iriL111illy' 11c liiid betii a ividt for yea s. 1W1. 1' Kink R. iviéciuioari‘ BJRRISTER. SOLICITOIK. l-ZTC. MONEY TO LOAN Inna Bloc-L Charlottetown. p31, [you any skates? If not, beg, burruutgnt up," i 11.121. "M dos, Lord Pr-rroi/s daughtr-r-in-law, "How's Glasgow?" asked Pat- "Rottcnfl said Geoffrey. "All rain 11nd evenings. Don't let's tnlk about it. Goshl It's marvellous to be home," At that on some rough ice, he lmt his balance, grabbed hold of Patricia. and pulled licr down. They fcll 111 a confused, ridiculous heap 11nd rollctl over. Young Mrs. Chan- ‘rcndily. "Anyhow, it's not much use who was skating past them, shrlck- igettfng married without pots of Cil with laughter. Geoffrey and Pat- "I can't," said Patricia. "I feel too weak with laughing. You're the donkey. You grabbed hold of me first." Geoffrey got to his feet and haul- ed her up. He thought what a cheery sort Pat was and what fun ft was to be with her. Quite sud- denly ft occurred to him that lt would be pleasant to case the biir- den on his mind. "Pat, we get on so well together. One day, will you marry me?” A study in brown from the top of her small felt hat to the toe of her skating boots, Patricia stood u11- sicndlly on her skates and locked at him. "You make mu feel weaker than ever, Geoff," she said at last. “Let's sit down." They sat down again on the ice. "Well, what do you think of the idea?" asked Geoffrey. "We've al- ways been pals, haven't me? And we like the some thfngs—thc coun- try and games, and so 011. Mother was always keen on it. I think ft would be a good plan." "It has its points," said Patricia. "We do like going about together. That's much more important than a. lot of rot about holding hands and looking at the moon. Isn't it?" "Um," said Geoffrey. "The only thing is, don't you think they'll say you're too young? Lots of girls get married at ninc- tecn, but. not many mcn." "We needn't get married uiitll they want. us to,” said Geoffrey money, and I'm supposed to be and looked at each other." "So should I. Well, we'll explain to them that we're prepared to waft. As a matter of fact, I know Father will be keen on ft. I don't know about Sir Hugh.“ “Oh. he'll be all right," nld Patricia. "Come on, I'm getting cold." Geoffrey caught her hand for a moment as they skated away. "Good old Pat!" "I always thought I should feel a fool getting o to someone," said Patricia. "But it feels quite natural to be engaged to you." For the remainder of the mom- lng they skated up and down tho lake together both completely hap- py, but with a. happiness which per- haps owcd more to the Joy of movement and to their surround- ings than to each other’: company. A party of mutual friends invited them to share a pfc-nlc lunch, and they spent. the afternoon practising figure skating, the centre of a mer- ry and derfsfve crowd. When the round crimson ball of the Decem- ber sun had dropped behind the naked ridge of I-llghcross Hill, they went back to Long Pctworth to- gether. Sir Hugh Lysardc was sit- ting in the hall. "Look here, Daddy," said Patricia, standing squarely be- fore hfm and swinging her skates. "Geoffrey and I think ft would be a good plan if we were engaged." The current. issue of the Live Stock and Meat. Trhde Review pub- lished by the Dominion Live Stock Branch Show; that there has been working my way up. Perhaps when I've run this show in Glasgow for a ll-ilf-im-liour Lilli-t" Carlin-y‘ 11.11 1-1pm pumped tom Aftm- three arrucd iit licmsliott, Patricia l._v.,- “Hmths O1 11m 501cm“ 81,15 o; zu-cl" ipk~ lo him on ill" t--l'1i n .-_ ,.,_(_,_‘nn,‘n 9H,“ it ‘V3,, Rood t) "lltr- 1'1’ .» 1732111117; 1..i Iii» l1'...- _ 1 l. 1.. 51-11 mum], w“ Fab bit. Fflther will have me buck in London and give 1'." ii (lc;':.1. \ ii decline ln the movement of cat- tle and calves from eastern ta w":- tcrn Canada fci- the first nine mcnlh; of the calendar year, and at the same tm: an fncrsase in the movement of hogs and sheep. with low the volume movihEiut during the some period in 1931. The move- ment of hog: at 272,488 is practi- cally 30,000 over the corresponding period last year; while the increase in the movement of sheep is just over 2,600. RADIO BATTERIES RECIIARG ED RIGHT V. C. Smallwood Radio Service 122 North River Raul DOMINION’ 0F CANADA PROVINFI‘! 0F PRINPl-i I-iIHYAItll ISLAND IN TIIIO PROBATE (‘OVIIT 23rd Glwrll: V», A, D. 1832 1N RE Fistula of Sarah Allken lute of Charlottetown in Qneenfiu (‘minty 1n the unlvl Province decorum-l ti-ntntv. 111' 'I‘1ll-l 1l0N(ll!I{.\1ll.1-l llnrnlil Lennard Pnlnir-r, Surrogate Jutlgo of O717-l1-24-t8t-tf’. NOTICE In regards to the n‘ reabouts of my father that. 1 have not Icon or, heard from for thin Int eighteen years, his name fa Mr. George Dlye. ‘ born in Bungay, P. E. Island. Any- one knowing his whereabouts can please notify me, his daughter, maiden name is Miss Pearl Hannah Daye, also born in Bunllh M" Mn. Pearl Crossmm, 19B Hamilton Street, Hartford, Conn. Junv. 4-31. Pi-oluilrg PU‘.- ctr", To the Sheriff‘ n!’ the County n! Queen's County or any (ioiiiitnible or literate person within llld County GREETING WHERAS upon reading tho pc- tltlon on filo of’ William Rcglnnld Aitkcn of f‘linr1oitofo\\-n_ Quiet-n’! (‘uunty IlfflI"‘5Zllfl, Morchnnt, fhc Ex- ecutor of Ill!‘ nhore nnnio Eiafuto prny- ing that n citation may he issued for the purpose hereinafter net forth: You nrc therefore lu-rcliy required to rltn all persons Inform-nun! in the enfd Estate to 11c nml nnpr-nr lit-lore mu nt n Probati- (‘mirt to In linlil In tho Cour-t House in_ fllinrlnttr-foivn In Queen's (founiy, In the, Rillll Province, on Werlncsilny the twenty-fifth day of January next, coming nt the hour of‘ eleven o'clock fort-noon of flu: nnmo My to alinw cause if any flu-y can why tho Accounts of the mild En- fuh- uhoilltl not be pnsiu-rl mu] the 149N110 clam-d us preys-ti for in nnlil petition 11ml on iiintlnn of W. 1-7. Bentley, 161111., Proctor for mill Poll- floner. Ami l 11o hereby nriler flint H true copy lit-roof 11c foI-fliivilli pub- llnhc-il hi some nr-wnbnhor published in (‘hnrlottr-town nforernhl, once ouch week for 1|! t lust four r-onnei-uilvo weeks from the llfll“ lit-roof 11ml that u trim copy hereof 1m forthwith imam] [n flit: fullniilng public plum-n rcnpoi-tlvoly..minioly_ in the linll of the (‘nnrt llniiim In (‘linrlotielnu-IL llfnlfllllltl, n1 m‘ 1 cni- the llnynl llnnk of ("iinndn 11ml nt or vir-nr flue flank of Nova Mi-utln lmtli In Plmrlntlz-town nfoi-r-nnlil. Ami l do II"I’(‘|I_V further 01'4"‘? flint n lruo rnpy hereof he forthwith non-ml on the Attorney- Gom-rnl of this Piovlnro no that nl portions fiiteresh-il in tho anlil En- tnhi ns nfnreulil may have due no- tloc thereof. GIVEN’ under my ham! nnil tlw flcnl nf lbn nnid rourt this 20th ilny of Devruulwr A. U. ‘I932 IIIII in ilitkfflfll .\‘l'fll' of Illa .“fl_|f‘.<|\":4 rt-lgn. Viz: Rough Boards . . . . . . - - - - - - - - Spruce Sheathing .. Pinned Pine Boards .. . Plum! spruce Board! .. Ill. 3.) Paoli's llnpllned Pine awa- 51-50 iwr 1W "- "I" "P Pinned 1x2 Spruce Strapping .- Planed 1x3 Spruce Strapping .. Pinned 2x4 Spruce Stnddlng 31-30 P" m“ “- “m” Mum] gm] Unplaned 2x5 Spruce Studdlng 82.00 P" 19° "'- Mcrchnntnbie Pinned Hemlock Boards $1.50 per I00 It- Also full line of Spruce Scantling, Joists, Fir and Hemlock Timber. L. M. POOLE & CO. ll. Lumber Lumber We have on hand and will be pleased to supply the following: ,,..,, $1.00 per 100 It. fllld IIP $1.00 per 10o n. ma up ,. $1.50 per I00 ft. and u]! ,,,,__. $1.75 per 100 ft. and up 60¢ per 100 ft. Linea! 15¢ pg: 100 N. LIIIQII Wharves -~--'~L W l- n‘l’1"7-' (3>l""‘- - l‘ . . - her Ling-hing face. screw. Azicl than. . 111.11 1.‘. i1lu‘.\.l L, .1 '1 . i 1. 14h p1,, ,1 (_ comm“ you ‘ye 11 g" m vimvcr 5.711.113 ‘m. cm. Ilni 11111111; uuun tilt-l’! 11111., li.i\c|..,-.. .,,.1.,,,k,.y‘ 510,, gpctgljng cud honeymoon Z should hate to go somewhere when you lust sat about a total of 69,062 head the move- ment of cattle fa 22,000 head bu- tsgii.) u.‘ 1.. vxnainn. Judn of Problth ‘Ifilllflfiflr-IL