oooeosvsstooooooooooooo» (I. 3i. Lnmpson é? Co. Lnmloo, IL. C. 4 England Public Auction Sales Hiippine miss twill be furnish- ed nitliiuil charge by upplylnl to It. '1‘. ilnlman. Ltd. Surn- mersitle. l‘ F. l. Alfred Fraser, Inc. ' A!" f: u .-..~ to is completely dismissed from the system day by clay. _ Unrecog- nised constipation can easily add years to your appearance. With poisons stagnating in your blood; your skin becomes muddled and your eyes dull. Lines develop from nose to mouth. Your face loses its (iULlll-Clll youthful outline.‘ Keeping young is,- afteralhfchiefly Do not allow constipa- n matter of keeping healthy, and "ition to mar your looks. licaltli is impossible unless bodily flTake a sparkling glass of ENUS “Fruit Salt” on rising every morning and rid your system,- thoroughly and punctually; of the poisonous waste that saps vitality and spoils your life. ENO has been prescribed by doctors for over sixty years as the one safe alkaline corrective of constipation. So be v sure you get ENO’S “Fruit Salt.” 5 J» Representatives for North America: Harold F. Ritchie Si. Co. LilL, 10-114 llleCnul $1., Toronto Ca 2S A in“ ~- -'_l » .. l??? iaviconaimc ' HEALTHLIVING l l ‘i flllhlllihl lltV-l lo~>v¢vcocooo+vo4+++4++4++ s". .13 TE$TEII g Farm For Sale \.‘.'l) z lil...\'l-"il“.l"_i lFI'l"l‘ED ° Farm For Sale at St. Catherines, l‘. W. 'l'.\i'l.OR 1 West River, consisting of 81 acres J. s. JZULOIK. 6 hard and soft wood. good house. tiptmnqii i. * barn and outbuildings. For further i2? i; ‘lliillrlltl Street § particulars aimlr 248 Kent Street. l488-il-lfi-iviin-tts43l. LIMITED. fii Queen Street (l! RAW FlllfS tlons are in arrears. Represented by a generous msnnnsr. "ZILI-‘lfth Avenue N" Y”"‘- l“ Y- 155B-3-19-stt6i. MRS. CHARLOTTE MacFADYEN, NO Zips! Subscribers to the Prince Edward Island Hospital Campaign Fund of 1930 are hereby notified that the Finance Committee have appointed Mr. Ira M. Brown its collecting agent in Charlottetown. Mr. Brown will call on those whose subscrip- As the work of hospital construc- tion is now in iii-nerves and funds are urgently required the Committee hopes that its efforts will meet with W. F. TlDMARSll. Chairman. X we DOG BISCUIT log, tron Hort Q1" lMPERIALS Successful fox ranchers feed INIIPER- IAl. FOX ISISCUITS because they contain food elements essential for health, strength, and successful propagation. INIPIGRIAIJS should be fed liberally now to vixens as they supply elements neces- sary to ensure large litters of strong pups and maintain health and vigor of vixens. lMPlDRIAT..S fed during this season richLv repay in generous results. IMPERIAL BISCUIT ODMPANY. ltd. Charlottetown, P. E. l. a retired banker to take action- He (lltl. know." hflflkém Don't tolerate filthy roaches. Spray into cracks and crev- ices. That drives them out . . . another shot I \4 and they die. Stewart & Lowther J. D. STEWART, K. C. . N. W. LOWTHER BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC. 84 Great George Street MONEY TO LOAN BELL &. MATHIESON It, R. Bell D. L. Mathleson, LLD. - Barristers 8a Solicitor! Money to Loan Charlottetown and Montague MARK R. McGUlGAN BARRISTER, SIOLfCITOB, ETC. MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Block, Charlottetown, IKE-l. McLEOD 8t BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. 0. Barrister and Attorney-nt-Llw Office: 180 Richmond Street MONEY T0 LOAN ll. r. iiaEiiiisr, m. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR NOTARY, he" Riley Building. Charlottetown. 576-2-8-1 month. J..fl. Macdonaltl, K.ll. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, he. ltlley Building Charlottetown, l‘. E. Island. Money w Loan and Collections given the very best attention 515-2-B-lmonth. ' o. EDGAR éi-iAw, K. c. Law Offices - Prowsc Block, Wills and Estates Settled. (‘ollcctor oi’ Bills (Special Dept.) AF}; protection for all documents. Charlottetown, P. It. L‘ I21 Grafton Street, Charlottetown. a i‘ The llouso of IIreams-Bono-Truoy Bylfargarotbdlcr " , (Continued) brother. I'm Blaine ‘llorniorln, 1nd. as my mother was unable to moot you herself, I came instead. Shall we go? I'll give the statlonmastér instnidlons about your baggage." so the unknown lmlliahmm of Montavan was the man of whom the two women at the neighbour- ing lunch table in the hotel had been gossiping-the central figure of that most tragic love-affair! Jean thought. she could discern, now. the origin of some 0f those embittered continents he had let ilfall when they were together in the mountains. In silence she followed him out f the little wayside station to ‘here the big head-lamps of a dictionary car shed a blaze of light on the malway, and presently they were slipping smoothly\ along be- tween the high hedges which flunk- ‘fd the road on either hand. 4 THE MASTER. OF STAPLE Itwas too dark to distingush Cl-lARl.O'l"l‘b'l'o .-..~.- _...........-_.._.....-.....-nsnL-.;-n:.. . ‘i ‘ ‘It’; given you unfair advm~ tgge, ix," 5X fQpllUdr "I" lllll SLT-R.A.I.N haven't penetrated you‘ lnoognlto- mm.,,|m, ,,,,,',,,,,,,,_ m1 “PM Ye- “ "t- m- “nafiarnrn- nan?" . antic-moo. ulnar-a “No. Nick Emmi!" my half- "m"! Praia}... tbc.ELASTICI’I‘Y* ‘that makes stockings WEAR h - YOU KNOW what causes those ruinous runs? l New stockings are elastic-they give under strain, stretch‘ :- andthejiilepring back again. When this precious elasticity . is desttoyedythe silk- threads,‘ instead -of giving, break details as the big cai- flew along. but Jean found herself yielding in- stinctively to the still, mysterious A famous soldier had acquired a reputation for very slow golf. fellow members on the course urged “Hi, General!" he shouted, alter being kept waiting ten minutes on the first gseeu. “l-lurry up; you arcift on a battlefield now, you felt herself jolted out of the placid “ reverie into which she had fallen. “Yes. It is odd we should meet w agtn so soonf.’ she assented hur- Made l: CHM! after all! You may be sure, Miss Professional Cards charm of the country-side at even. A slender young moon drifted like a curled petal in the dusky blue of the calm sky, lta pale light fainlty outinlng the tops of the trees and the cl'm, gracious curves of distant hills, and touching the mist thflt filled the valleys to a nebulous, pearly glimmer. so that to Jean's eager eyes the foot. of the hills seemed iaved by some phan- tom sea of faery. She felt no inclination in talk. The smooth rthythm of the pulsbig car, the chill sweetness of the even- ing ah- agalnst, her face, the shad-- owy, half-revealed landscape all combined to lull her into a mood of tranquil appreciation, aloof and restful after the fatigue of her Journey and the shock of her un- expected meeting with the Iingllah- man from Montavan. Bhe knew that later she would have to take up the thread of things again, ad- iust her mind to the day's surpris- ing developments, but just for the moment she was content to let everything else slide and simplycn- toy this first exquisite revelation of twillt Devon. For a. long time they drove in slence, Tormarin aeemln no more deposed m talk than she herself. Presently, however, he slowed the ear down and, half-turning in his seat, addressed her abruptly. I "This is somewhat in the nature of an,antl-clima-x,"' he ennarked. the comment quite evidently spring- ing from the thoughts which had been absorbing him. He spoke curtly. as though he resented the march of events. Jean rledly. _ "The silence has-been broken~ Peterson. lt was by no will of mine." Jean smiled under the cover 0f the darkness. "You're not very complimentary," she returned. "I'm sorroy our meet- ing seems to afford you so little satisfaction." There was a ripple of laughter in her tones. "It's not that." As he spoke, he slackened speed until the ear was barely moving. "You know it's not that," he continued, his voice tense. "But, all the same, I'm gcrng to ask you to-forget Montavan." I Jean's heart gave a violent throb, and the laughter went suddenly out of her voice. or she repeated blank- ly: ‘To forget Montana?" "Please. I said-and did-a. few mad things that day we spent to- gether. It was to be an uncounted dew you know, and-oh, well the air of the Alps is heady! 1 want you to forgive mo-and to blot out all remembrance of it." l-fe seemed to speak with some effort. yet each word was uttered delibflliely. searing its way into her consciousness like red-hot iron. The curt, dlffloultly spoken sen- tences could only signify one thing -that he had meant nothing, not even good, * ‘ comradshlp, that day at Montavan. lie had merely been amusing hiimelf with I girl SOIIITIIIIOAT Ciissr Cocos tale With 6c n i": o for stéckingsi 2 l"’f.""i’."’,§;,,,‘§"'i‘,.l’,,‘,,i,,,, yy,,-,,',.,,w g whome he never expected to meet again, and now that circumstances had so unexpectedly brousht them together he was clearlyianxiouii that she should be under no misap- prehenson in the matter. Jean's pride wnthed beneath the insult of it. It was as though he feared she might, make some claim upon his regard and had hastened to warn her, almost in so many words, not to set a fletitous value upon anything that had occurred between them. The glamour was indeed torn from her stolen day on the mountains! The whole mem- ory of it, above all the memory of that pulsing moment of farewell, would henceforth be soiled and vulgarised-ooverted into a rather sordid little epsode which she wouldgiadly ‘nave blotted out from amongst the concrete happenings of life. ' The fem‘nlne instinct against self-betrayal whipped her into quick speech. “I've no wish to forget that you practically saved my life," she said. “I-shall always"—l‘ghtly—-“fell- very uruchcbllged for that." "You exaggerate my share in the matter," he replied carelessly. “You would havecxtrlcated yourself from your difficulties without my assis- tance. I have no doubt. Oh, more truly"-—with a. short laugh-"you would never-have got into them." '_ He said no more, but. let out the car and they shot forward into the gatherinrdusk. Presently they ap- prdachcd a-pair ofimaaslve iron gates admitting to the manor drive, and la these were opened in res- ponse to a ahrlllhoot from Tor- mirln’: horn thrcar swung round into an avenue o! ehna, the bare bougha, interlacing overhead, mak- ing l. black network against the moon-lit sky. i Still in silence they approached the house, its dlmjrey bulk. loom- lng Jndeteririhiately" through the ' . mist, ‘ " herb and time‘ with a glowing shield of or- angc from some unshaded window. Ind- almost before Tot-math had pulledrup tho car, the front door flawaipcn and a-wlde Tlbllltl oi lght streamed out from the hall ‘we ind. ‘ i eairwu cotuclous of two 0|‘ filireo figures grouper in the open doorway, dark nznlnst the welcom- ing ‘blue of lllht, then one of them under strain. It is then that runs start! ~ l - : *Tbe Lax Way to make stockings last twice as long Wash after EACH wearing.” Perspiration left in the stocking will actually rot the silk. Don't rub with cake so: . It destroys the elas- ticity of the silk, ma mg it lifeless, apt_to _ break intoruxis, and bccometill-fitting. With 1. One teaspoon of Lux makes plenty of suds Lux there's no rubbing. - . ‘ for each pair of stockings. Don't use coo-warm water-this fades colour. ' 2; squaiq the gentle lukewarm Lux suds Lux may be dissolved in hot water but the through your stockings, rinse well. suds should be lukewarm for washing. . .._ - Avoid ordia so: s—cakes, powders, chips. ‘l liese often contain harmful alkali, which robs silk of its-life, wcakens'tlireads,'fiides colours. Lux has no harmful alkali. Anything safe in water alone is safe in Lux. Was/a ibis 2-minute way: ’ i knrflrothénumlmiumw coflutr y the " ‘ondfinuntooloficnbcmlgh. , detached itself from the group and lngly young-clear and full 0f hastened forward with outstretched vitality like tho vdce of a Blrl. Then the light frckerod on to her into the house. "But a tiresome "Here youare at last!" _ A __ , . . “pqme M tho? For an instant Jean hesltated,_powdered, and she realised‘ that Dwllle who never know when its doubtful 8s to whether the speaker tirs surprlslnely ymmiz voice must time l0 swam! I Slmilli/ would!" maid be Lady Anne. The voice belong to her hostess. ' which addressed her was so Emil-I “I was sorry I could not meet her." hair as white as if it had beenvvisltor turned (To Be Continued l The last word in ‘Christie quality . . . extra rich . . . extra light . . fiextra delicious. 1.; . and always fresh asfreshcah be. _ swhy Lox is made especially to preserve the elas- ; " ticityfgtliiat makes even-the sheerest stockings really wear. you at the station myself." WH- tinned Lady Anne, leading the way y- get; away w'thout forcibly ejecting