THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Z——~¢_ THAT AFTERNOON I WANT SOME RINSO. MR. MORRIS. I HEAR IT GETS CLOTHES CLEAN WITHOUT SCRUBBING tin-ii‘- PAGE TWO iseiwooo ~ ' su-zeev CAT Z FRANK u. VsPsARMAN “so YOU new Ass, A LOT or MY cos-rah: T° cnauomc 1o Rmsq Fit," warren WASHES YES, THE WASHBOARD IS AS HARD ON MY SHIRTS AS IT IS ON YOU Newer-nurse econ! i voun ou: ours Sprayers Cultivators ARE WEARING OUT We have some unusual bargains in repossessed sprayers-for practical use as good as new. And a special end-of-season price on 2-row Culti- _;. -_*;._....,;_ .‘ _ tivators at $48.00. vators. These are not scuffler attachments-real cul- HARDIE MFG. C0. P. World's Largest Builders of Potato Sprayers E. I. Branch, Sumrnerside Professional Bards Summer Art Glass through July at the Studio 0| MARY ALLISON nouu. Cape Traverse 5217-6-l6-lmonth. GEORGE J. ARMSTRONG ARCHITECT 1~l5 Great George Street 4734—5-2'.0-1mc-dally ,___. , , 1 srnu ART s.- L0“ THER .1. n ‘icwairr. K- C- w t‘. LiYvVTllElt 33113151513, SOLICITORS, ETC. 8i Great George Street lllUNliY TO LOAN. .__€_<_._..__.___ _:__ MARK R. 1\IcGUIGAN . A. BARRISTER. SOLICITOR, ETC. IWUNEY To LOAN Cameron Block, Charlottetown» P-E-l- -___- BELL S: LIATHIESON R. lt. Bell, I). L. hlatliicson, LL. B. Barrister d; Solicitors Money to Loan Charlottetown and Montague __,_,__ ..._..i McLEOD & BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Barrister and Attorney-at-Law Office: 180 Richmond Street MONEY T0 LOAN Charlottetown, P. E. l. r —-— McDONALD 8: McPllEE B . A. J. A. McDONALD. n. r. McPHEE ' Barristers. Attorneys. Etc. ’ BIONEY TO LOAN 145 Great George Street 4734-5-20-lmo-daily __ W. E. DARBY, LL. B Barrister 8a Solicitor MONEY T0 LOAN Dalton Building, Summcrside, P. E. l. Max Factors Preparations Are used by 85% of the Screen Stars —snd should be on every ladies’ Dressing Table. Cleansing Cream, Plain and Lemon Powders, Rouge, Astringent, etc. MISS RYAN, Representative. D. EDGAR SHAW. K. C. Law Offices -- Prowse Block, urrsfirnrs Flowers have been so much im- proved of late, that the old style plants, can now hardly be recogniz- ed. We are always pleased to have customers call at our gardens head of Prince Street and personally sel- ect. We might say since the auto- mobile has become the mode of travel, our sales have increased 100 per cent direct from our gardens. Please bring baskets or boxes to hold plants, by so doing we can give bet- tcr service. Annual bedding flower plants: ‘Aster, Phlox, Stocks, Verbena, Pet- unia, Balsam, Snapdragon, African Marigold, Scotch Marigold, Sailp- glossis, Cosmos, sweet Alyssum, Lobelia, Dusty Miller or Silver Leaf at 30c per dozen postpnid. Seedling Pansy, Daisy, Carna- tions, For-get-me-not, Salvia, Zin- nia, Kochia and Vick's Ruffled and Fringed Petunia, a masterpiece of nature's art at 50 cents per dozen postpaid. Wintered over-blooming Pansy, Daisy and Carnation at $1.20 per dozen, add 20 cents dozen postage. Double Hollyhock 25 cents each postpaid. Plants started in Mid- winter, Delphinium or perenniel Larkspur, Digitalis or Foxglove and Sweet William at 10 cents each postpaid. Vegetable Plants — Extra early cabbage, cauliflower, and celery twice transplanted 25 cents per dozen. $1.50 per 100, postage l0 cents per 100. Late cauliflower not ready before June 10th, twenty cents per dozen. $1.00 per 100 postpaid. Late cabbage plants ready about the 10th June, 40 cents per 100, by mail 50 cents per 100. Extra. early tomato twice trans- planted, 60 cents per dozen post- ‘ paid, second early home tomato twice transplanted, 40 cents per dozen postpaid, late tomato 30 cents per dozen postpaid. If you want ripe tomatoes, order extra early plants, they yield more of both ripe and green fruit. Cucumber, squash and pumpkin plants 40 cents per dozen postpaid. Carter 8c Co, Seed Store, Queen Street and A. H. Burke at our old stand, Market Building, have our plants for sale, they are delivered to them fresh every any. Please wme your name plainly and enclose post- al note or express money order. This advertisement will appear m this Piper every Thursday and Monday. Address all mail orders to J. J. GAY d: SON 127 Grafton Street, Charlottetown. ' Wills and Estates Settled. Collection or Bills tspecial Dept.) SAFE protection for all documents. Phone 264 Box 187 Charlottetown 4557-6-28thursmon-tf. (Continued) The fires that had lighted the sky earlier in the night had died- dowm-chlcfly for lack of material m the flames. Ah important cart of Sleepy Cat lay in ruins, though the extent of the destruction was hidden in the darkness. One quarter o! the struggling settle- ment had escaped the torch and the vigilantes and the reprisals of the outlaws_thls was the corner em- bracing the stage barns, OBYDY'5 hotel and the nciv railroad station. From the hill where they had halted Sclwood and his companions recovering their horses, mode their way unclcr such cover as they could singly, to the stage barns. Lcfcvcr met them. Sclwood nskcd for the news. Lcfevcr point- ed to a- pile of smoking ruins down the hill. “Some of ihcm rivcr rats have burned the bunk-house on us, John," said Lcjevcr. “Hints the way they k001i their promises!" “McAlpin told me nothing of that," exclaimed Selwood, looking angrily zlown the hill. "Didn't know 1t was on fire when he started," returned Lcfcvcr. "But I'm telelng you the tcamsters are rat-in‘ to go. They're only waiting for you." "Just hold ‘em till I get some bearings,” was all Selwood replied. Bull Page took the stemming horses baa-k to their stalls, and Scott was scnt out to scout. Lcfcvcr told Selwood and Pardaloe what more he could of the situ- ation; Starbuck, who had been‘ missing for a time at the outset, had taken the gamblers fight in hand at a moment when the Vigi- lantes were driving all before them, turned the tables on the clean-up- men, and now held the survivors of their disorganized force at bay in the unfinished railroad station. Starbuck had sent word by messen- ger that he would give them an hour to get out o.‘ the station and out of the town-coupled with the threat that if they didn't move they would be burned out by day- light. Starbucks men, Lefever added. held the only building left in the Rivcr Quarter, where most of the burning had bccn~Bunty Bartoes place clown ncxt the river; it had ccczipcd the flames. In the upper town Czrrpys hotel, which had been gutted. the gamblers had spared. He knew nothing about Christie. Pardaloe has been dispatched to the station with the ammunition. He came back with a long face. but n long face wfis nothing new for Purrlnloc. C-r-i“, Wbillldfltl, was thrrc treating m.» wounded, who lay on the IIuO-i‘ izi the freight mom- There was only ti. pretense of a guard kept about the building; within it, disgruntled Vlgilantcs COPYRIGHT by CHARLES SCRIBNEM; SONS. i; vmu service nursed their grievances, railing‘? chiefly at one another; and in one corner, with nobody to command,‘ owing to lack of ammunition, Old General Roper, though hit, was, maintaining headquarters, with put it, nor quarters. The only thing that prevented the refugees; from running away was the fear of ‘ getting shot i! they put. their noses outside. Selwood felt he must first o: all see and learn what he could from Curpy. Directing his few compan- ions to stick together and telling Lefever to throw out a stronger guard about the barn, selwood started for the station. By skirting the river bank and working from one to another oi.’ the breaks in the bench, he reached the rear door of the station with- out drawing any fire either from its defenders or ltspbesicgers. He pushed open the door and entered the hall without being opposed or observed. A glance was enough to reveal to Selwoodls unsympathetic scrutiny the complete demoraliz- ation of the Vigilante element. It was almost by accident that Abe Cole, the bandaged but still fight- ing blacksmith, saw 'Selwood and, running toward him, greeted him with a. shout that drew attention to the loug-hoped-for arrival of the taciturn gambler. As men, wounded and unwounded, crowded about him, he eyed the scar-faced,‘ blurting blackmiith coldly, paying no attention whatever to his effus- ive welcome. “You running this thing, Abe?" “Running it?" echoed Abe hoars- ely. “I was running it-nobodyh running it. They wouldn't do a thing I told ‘em to do," declared,- Cole, with a plentiful sprinkling of! profanity; “now they're cornered, jus’ as I told 'em they'd be if they didn't obey orders, and there's about as much fight in ’em now as there is in a bunch of jack-rabbits!" Sclwood, ignoring impatient in- terpleaciers that raised their voices, some abusing the blacksmith and? some one another, looked about the two rooms- The figure that in-i stantly arrested his attention was‘ that of Carpy, his head swathcd in‘ about among his wounded, who, filling one corner, lay on the floor I know of this side of Medicine Bend, outside what Starbucks got. ‘So I'd advise you not to pass any of ‘em out to the jack-rabbits; put; ‘em in the hands of men that will i use ’em.” ‘ "The teamsters, your men, are i standing up," blurted out Abe.l_ "They Si/“Dned 'em from rushing six rounds apiece left. Starbuck' h ._ will come back." i had wandered. lottetown on Saturday, the twenty- Sclwocfrs glance l neither head, as Pardaloe tartly! lin various attitudes of prostratlon,Fonynqawyii hope you-re being anger, and disgust. ‘careful when you dig up a worm‘ Selwood. silencing those closest, cgmhu‘; Remember n, ca“ feel and spoke to Cole. "I sent what cart- {mm}; just u; wen as you “n3; ridges I could rake up, Abe; it's all ‘B05931, Transmgpt, MY SHIRTS ARE LASTING MUCH LONGER NOW. MARIE AND MONTHS LATER THAT'S eecAussi us: RINSO " AND com‘ nave TO scsua OR BOlL. AREN'T THEY NICE AND WHlTEl THE GRANULATED SOAP M" 1 moumds Wm‘ "8 1cm ' rslikc t5,- (l never b S) says Mr . “be” m " "wand. s Mary Malian e mak Y have: bochm me , 8y I . - T ed w wuyijllst a gong‘ en hardly lnsg is I, _ 1'6 s i clean‘ g cat £91‘ dish ' than trot-o. Grease soaks rlvggihjffflijgg brim ‘just sec how zhcy Si: dry by thcmsclvzisglnvde ‘Economic “Csouny other 11gb Mel-g; tsoligful for cu 5 crs rc_ Guam, d . Lg," B: b7 the m‘; Liaise-tern: in tub or washer whiter washes safely master to settle the ancient bound- ary dispute between New Jersey and Delaware. Phctostatic copies of documents hundreds of years old were intro- duced by Duane E. Miller, Assistant Attorney General of New Jersey. The originals. among which was a. {copy of the grant of southern New Jersey to the Duke of York, repose in the vaults of the New Jersey His- torical Society at ‘Trenton. ‘rhe lid-mile boundary line, over which there has waxed s. dispute for more than two centuries, sep- arates the valuable oyster beds of Delaware Bey. The case hasfbeen before the Supreme Court at var- ious times during the past 125 years and the present hearing is before a. special master appointed by that ‘l wild4°°kmg "imdagb m°‘”“g vbody n» an effort m settle u. Wife's Mother (to gardening IN THE lVIATTER 0F The Voluntary Winding Up Act l5 Geo. V., Cap. 9 (P. E. Island, 1925) and PATONS LTD. Notice is hereby given that. a Special General Meeting of the us an hour ago. But they ain't got shareholders of the above nuncd 9931135"? Will be held at the Y. M. C. A. Rooms, in the City of Char- I '60 acres of which is under cultiva- - . - Spinning and Weaving Send rne your wool to be spun into yarn and wove into blankets. Single yarn is 25 cents and doubled 26 cents per pound. Blanket $2.25; it takes live lbs. of wool to make a. blanket. They will all be laundered unless ordered otherwise. Wool must be well washed and all dirt and burrs picked out. The size of single yarn is medium and double yarn fine, medium and coarse. Put ship- pers name on all parcels and own- er’; name, address and instructions inside; otherwise we will not be responsible for losses. Send by mail or freight. Freight will be paid on 100 lbs. WM. LANDRIGAN, 65 Queen Street, Charlottetown. 4327-5-l-thurssnt4 months. FCR SALE l offer by private sale, my farm of 85 acres, at Spring Valley, Lot. l8, [frincc County. This is choice land. tion and the balance in wood. ‘l-‘IW crop will be sold with the farm. This property is convenient 10 Church, stores, school, ‘locksmith shop and is five miles distant 11'0"! Kensington, one of the best shill‘ ping points in the County- T119 farm buildings are in good state of repair. For further particulars apply to ‘ CECIL CASLEY, Spring Valley, ll. ‘R. No. 5- 5430-8-20-tts3i. i Janie tl/ondzn 1"‘ Ask about week-and BARGAIN FARES Fl!“ dtllllll from w. u. Roam- L. r- e ‘ 0 mil: on mall: of See Canada‘: mightiest moun- ' rains on your trip to the coast. Take the scenic route flanked by nature's choicest gems. The famous Continental Limited, all mel and radio-equipped, Leave: Bonavent n: 52m, Montreal Dally at 11.15 p.m.,(E.S.T.) for Minaki, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Jasper National Park, Prince Rupert. Vwfvuifl- Victoria, Seattle. Equipment includes super-luxuries of modern railway mvrl- ‘u- Tlrkr! M: trips n; . Ritchie. Tlr "I14 ' u. w. (‘lnrkln 1 l‘ CAN/ll) AN NA Iona - __—._..____..-_ Pilcllo. Doc,” he said as he saw iscventh day oi June, 193i, at 2.30 L QQTDY elbfiwing his way toward p. m. for the purpose of receiving i him. the report of the Liquidators in re- FORMULA suited especially to needs of pllpS. .1‘ \ ' RICH in essential vitamines. HEALTH-promoting r/t STRENGTH-imparting. ASSURES normal and successful devel- ; .5‘ opment. 4 Manufacturers, Here is a New Pudding For Tomorrow's Dinner.’ CREAM RICE PUDDING 4 tablespoon: rice M cup ruler }$ teaspoon ult 2}‘ cup! St. Chlrltl Milk l 9f cum water Nutmeg Weeh the rice thoroughly. then ldd with the Inger and nit tn the milk diluted with water. Pour into e buttered baking dish end add a wrinkling of nutmeg. Set the dish in a pan of hot water and bake three hours in a llow oven (300° F.) stirring several time: the tint hour to prevent the rice from oettling to the bottom. A copy o! the "Good Pro- ridafe Cook Book" will be gladly oenryou, tree, ilyou will send ue your name and lddr , 9J0 34m» (idol-J m Game at. Toronto elf-vii lig/lll u‘. SICHARLES much Carpy. wounded and infuriated, was grateful but ghim, Selwood, reached for the bloody hand stretched out. He listened with patient attention to the wrought- up surgeon, who tried to explain the wreck of their plans, though with an expression in his eyes that pndicated his mind wandered, Looking over the shoulders o: those around him, Belwood saw the cowed spirit of the Vlgllantes. One exception attracted his attention: one man appeared profoundly in- different to the fortunes oi’ the night. In a comfortable chair in the farthest corner of the second room, his bald head in a huge fur C3D well Pulled down, and his hand: clasped in his lap, set the queer pioneer trader of Sleepy cat and of the mountain country_o1d man Van Tambei. Everything he hnd in the world had but Just gone up in the smoke of Fort street, but the tragedy had apparently failed to shake\his spirit. Composed and collected he struck selwood as an odd contrast to the welter of wrangling, confusion, and cowar. dice about him. ‘rho gamble;- silentiy laughed. (To be continued) SIGNATURE 0F OLD BRITISH KING USED 1N LAND SUIT PHILADELPHIA, June 23-—(U.P.) -'I'he royal signature and seal of K1118 Charles II of England figured in evidence at a hearing in the Federal building before a special spect to the winding up of the said company and any" financial state- ‘ments, reports and accounts which may be submitted by the undersign- ed Liquidators at such meeting and _ » for the transaction o! all other bus- inessincident to the final winding up of said company. , Dated this fifteenth day o! Jun , A. D. 1931. , W. W. OWEN, J. A. MecLABEN. 5358-6-18-dly till June 26th. HOLSTEIN ASSOCIATION The Annual Meeting of the P. E. Island Holstein A ' " will b held In the Agricultural llall, Cher- lottetown, on Friday, Jone 20th, 1t 1.30 P. M. The Annual Field Day and Picnic will be held at Bunbury Farm on July 7th. Plan to come. C. E. MncKENZIE, Secretary. 542t-6-20—tts3l. WOOL The l’. E. I. Sheep Breeders‘ Al- aoclntlon in receiving W001. at the Agricultural Hall, Charlottetown. Do not ply freight on nil lhlp- mentn. Address. WOOL GRADING sTATION Charlottetown _ 71-8-19-“881- ALLEY 8c CW8 Shoe Store THURSDAY and FRIDAY June 25th and 26th Bargains all over the Store Specials arranged in centre of shop for easy choosing. Men’s Work Boots . . . . . . . . . . . .. . $2.39, $2.70, $31"? Men’sFineBoots $2.98,$3-95 Women’s Fine Shoes, straps and ties . . . $1.75, $2155 Women’s Enna Jettiek Shoes reduced from $7.00. $7.50,$8.00to . . . . . . S5.60,$6.00,$6.40 ALLEY 8c so. Ltd