§~ =".z¢\:;j,., e.~" ` ls is c ul .. ‘ _,» .S l l~i“»~ "Most girls know that a motor- ing invitation ls an opportunity to be embraoeda" ,-_...__._. .' (3l___;_l ~= ;‘,<="> fir _ "" / .f `-' ?‘/ ef _ .`__ | . _ IF HE‘D`PRODUCE THE MAN “Land me Hfty dpl_l_ar|,,~l[._oi" styur. oid man." 1 1- .af -1. ._ _ “lf you‘li producekhe year, old man. l'Il do it."' ___, _ __ ,_ , _ _ f, V . /_ _ .1 O. ' ILM \»;h\' "` How rrivggéks 0u'r "Don't you hm<'~"l1‘»”-#r`l'»6 lor a husband and 'wife to~ilve lplrt now and then?" "Well, yeni I tried that with my wife for a while and 1 _ li mndo uc both so happy that we do lt aI!°ge\her." _‘ ‘.‘ 'l fv e _iff it I if s if . , _Qi nf .. ’ li ‘ /XGWI 'I "Ii _ ._ A li __:, _ M* I _____'_| 1 v_,__ gl-\l_` l I r‘~‘.» .,,_.\ - _ i\ ` “K3 l __»»- ‘tv \ 'll `cr_,_ c- . She: I thought your wife wouldrft let you play Sundays. ` ' He: we all right now. 8nc'o learning the game. \ 1 l i l l i t l I I 1 l ! » l l r ' " - ri’ ' 'Yr ` Ji THE STORY Rand knew this place of his birth and his venturesome youth like it book, knew the shore, knew the oove. and understood the movement of the tides and currents. He be- lieved the man had been shot-in the _ club. or boathouse, perhaps-- camed out and thrown into the deep water. Perhaps this was before the break of day and then, with the dawn. the murderers were horrified to see the corpse washing on the sand, to hear Gay's terrified cries at its discovery. So for, Gay lent willing credence, thrilling to every word. "The Chink saw you were here, reported to your fzfiend Ingram, who came and tried to frighten, and then buy you out. To get rid of you be- cause things are going on they don‘t want you to discover.-Why, see how plain it is! When Ingram was here the other night, the Chlnlt watched to assure no interruption saw me coming, deliberately show- ed himself led me into a chase to keep me from discovering Ingram." G-ay's loyalty wavered, but she steadied it. by memory of the sympa- thetic voice, thc friendly touch of the strong hands. the shadow in thc gentle eym. “He looks so honest, Rand,” she protested. "He has such soft,sad eyes." "Oh, so's a cow," said Rand rude- ly, for he was greatly disturbed. But upon serious consideration, he was inclined to agree that she WHS in no particular danger as long as she maintained an air of utter in- nocence, seeming not only l~0 See nothing but to suspect nothiDE- Above all. ho tu-god her to betray 11° curiosity, no ini/crest in rB88'l`d '~° things that went onabout her, and wiiii Ronald 1ng=r:tm,1f he came Sglllll to continue her warm and friendly but unlnquisitive interest. Rand did not believe that the af- fair was a simple matter of bootlegs- ini; as he had nt first S\L‘=l>@0l»@d. The favored method in bootlegglng ls il constant shifting, of base, the effac- ing of surprise laud_l!1iZS. “T55 Pm? place and then another. The acquire' mgm of gi permanent base for their iiiicii, operations implied n. deeiwf md more demiy enterprise, and with his Muni impulsive venturesomeuess. H-and had promptly decided to 800 U3' the bottom of it.. to ferret out. alvhi? and single-handed. this b\l-“H935 °t crime that had attached itself to bll€ island. _ Gay was eager to assist. __ __ "I feel now more than ever. :ng said. “that hltwns _§_°___:_*3oove_ i£'iI.°‘é§?.1.°‘..I' £‘ly"33u fest. rgdggg to be avenged. and_I stupidly L_; E to the whole thing from beelnh K _______,__.__1---1---‘ii 0404-O-*+04* OOOOOf'9f§-OO 944* EYES TESTED AND GLASSES FITTED E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR Optometrists 142 Richmond Street OQO 494-04 *OO #4 o-o-oo-coco-00444-Q-e 9440+000-0 F0ll__§ALE nzolsnrnan sows AND BOABS in-ieec nr quick sue s llerlslewl sows, seven month sold. Also 3 B085. sum, ue, sired by the famous B01! oak Lodae Masterpiece- ‘ ,um u iuuuber of ywns ll°ld¢l“ bun. out of mu- best omllfiel ‘hm- and sired by Doktor Busleldt Abbe- kerk, an outstanding sire, out of the hmmm Elizabeth Schulling Abbe- uork, o cow with three consecutive rcconls of over |100 pounds of butter per year. ' For further particulars apply LIVE STOCK SUP'ERlN'l'EN'DEN’l‘. Depdanent of Agriculture, Charlottetown, P. E. I. 2069-1-7-21. POULTRY We will be buying live and dressed chick- ens and fowl for the balance of the season at highest market prices. Be sure your poultry is well fattened before marketing as you will then get the- best prices. SWIFT CANADIAN C0., LTD. l l l l l l l 1 I l l l < 1 li end. But I shall not bungle it again, not with you to help me_" That day Rand put extra patented locks on all Gay's windows and doors. und connected an attachment to her electric wiring which he carried up into the highest branches of the tall pine at her door, where he placed ri small rose-colored light bulb, arrang-_ ing it among the branches where it would throw its light to the upper window of his grand.father’s _ house. This he connected with two switch buttons inside the cott8f8‘@. one by her bed upstairs. and one in the window- seat in the living room where she usu- ally sat al. her easel. This light she. was to__.turn on at the slightest .sus- picion of any unusual stirring about the house, and he, on the hillslope be- yond, would keep watch for it. _ , Gay professed herself frankly thrilled Gay professed herself frankly thril- led with these precautions for her pro- tection. She said she had never loved Lone Pine so much, she said she could never bear to go away from the is- land for o. minute now, for fear the commision of a crime would occur in her absence. "Oh, to think of it," she cried ec- statically, “at my age! To think of living on so sordiclly, so sancly, so un- exciting, for so many years! And then, when I am almost an old wo- men, and very sensible, to come to 8 good little lazy island like this, and stumble new-rust into mystery. Hd- venture and love. Oh, what luck!" _ All day Rand worked about the house perfecting his arrangcments to instu~e her safety as well as he could. and when he left at last, in the early evening, he called back to her Eayly in o. loud voce: "Good-bye, Gay. See you in the moming! Eleven o'c1ocki" » Gay had expected him to c0m¢ again in the evening, and would have called inquiry. invitation, after him. but he was gone. When darkness had fallen she wished for him greatly. The very Dre- cautions they had taken tended W make her nervous, ill at 68-99. S0 th” sua started painfully at every real °" fancied sound, and every/low com- plaint of the rheumatic trees in the woodland set her shivering. _ When at last came a ¢Il11¢k.k°°°‘k- af me wr. wlthout'R.aud‘s'assurlha whistle, for the first; time; »hBl" thoughts leaned naturally to the Pls' wi in ner desk. and She fm f‘"'u:° quickly, grasp!-H8 it in n@W°“5 1 ' gefzyho-is-there?" she asked nerv- h t to the door. _ otfg' eRE:»I§gld Ingram. Nothlhil important. I will come another time if you are busy- ..No_.. Mindful of Rands instructions to be friendly, and her fears instantly Bg- suaoea by the pleasant __"°i°°- 1;; bravely opened the door. H°W W of you, Mr. Ingram. I 'was lonely "“§i`_f,';yeS went quickly to the Pistol in her hand, ‘-something frlghwhlgig you," he said keenly. I-Las any! happened?" CONTINUED ._._.._-<-o_>--- sAx.'r IN Novx~so0'rIA _ The successful operativfl °f i-he Maiagash deposit in N°V°~ 3°°“‘* 1”” greatly stimulated the search 101’ sau in gym Mgrlthne Pi‘0Vlnc¢S Bhd further prosl>¢¢'»lh8 iS contemplated. CANADA‘S DAIRY HEBDS One million. four hundred and ninety thousand. three hundred and forty cows supplied milk to creamer- les in Canada during 1926. Heart Trouble llaals and Fool lumb nl' Gall in-»;_wm. rbwlu, liubui-u.I 0:3 with my heart an-donerno, no iiii ici lift its iii ‘ Mitauaug ' |*iE»f_\ilT Nttivtvlili is i iii .mga ` d uutod :2'm|@, ‘nan and since than I have 0 my h_°“bh_,, ' .1 Price 501:. A box at all 3 ui , oiled direct on dric:nby°rT§:o T. Milburn q`oronta, Ont LIVE HOGS fl We are taking live hogs daily, excepting Saturday, payint highest market prices. Davis £¢Fra'ser v | in i ll _ 1. > Dorothy Dlx LetterBox_ J, /_ itil? It is the selection of rich, western wbeats - the finest I D0;0‘|:hy D_gi_U_l‘g_62Se grown on the prairies - that gives elif!! flavour to bread and a oung an s 0-5 ' ‘ - Talk to The Boy Who =Won't Go to Work-Do_es _All Knowledge Result from _Years ‘Spent in __ School? » '_ __ DEAR MISS DIX-My 19-year-old daughter is madly -in ,love with a young man whom she has known only a year. Two days before they were tdlbe married he told her that he couldn’t marry her because his aunt- didn't think he should marry, but when we ask- - ed why his aunt oblccted to his marrying. he gave f such a vague reply that I went to his home town to investigate. and found out that he__had been married and divorced. It made him furious. He said he would never forgive me. and that his pastlife didn't‘ concern me. My daughter sided with him and she ' has left home. and says that death is the only thing that will keep her parted from him. Did-I do right. or wrong in investigating about this young man? - A WORRIED MO_'I’I-IER.. Answer: Of course. you did right in trying to find out every~. i `.hing you could about the young man. but you were too late about doing so. As soon as you found that there was any probability of your daughter mar rying him, it was your duty to begin looking up his _ record. The most amazing thing on earth is the fact that parents will let their daughters marry men 'of whom they know absolutely nothing. If a. girl was going to buy a dog, her father would look up its pedigree and see what sort of stock it came from. and he would have a. veterinarian examine it to see that it was free from disease. If his daughter was going to buy a house. her father would have a lawyer examine its title and see that it was clear. with no mortgages on it. If a girl had some money to invest and wasgoing into partnership with a man, her father would inquire around and mid out if he was honest and industrious and sober and not given to gambling, and-» was likely to make a success. ‘ - " - ' Yet a man will let his daughter marry a perfect stranger' without even- taking the trouble to go to the place where the young man was born' and reared and find out whether he comes of good honest people or not. He doesn't even try to find out whether or not his past is so black that ' it will smirch all his future. f All of us know' pathetic cases of sweet. lovely, innocent young girls who have rnarired men who turned out to be bigamists. or who were ‘former jail- ' birds. All of us know girls who have married men who posed as being sue# cessful business man.-and prominent citizens in some distant city who turned out to be ne'er-do-wells who couldn‘t even make a living. All of us know pathetic cases-orgirls whose lives were wrecked through marriage' with roues. _ ' ' - _ Whether a man will make an amiable, considerate and tender husband.. and be easy to get along with, nobody can find out beforehand. Every - girl has to take her chances cn that. but what sortof a man a man is can easily be found out, and any girl’s parents can get u good line on their daughters Banco in time to stop the wedding if his record ia bad; and the girl has any sense. As simple a thing as making an inquiry through a commercial agency willbring the desired lnformntion.- . '_ It may be said that if the girl is in love she won’t listen to any warning. Possibly, that is true in a few instances, such as that of your daughter, poor-' Worried Mother. -_Most girls-have more intelligence. however. They are not a.nxious‘Jo have a.No.' l wife from whom their husbands have neglected to get a dl orce bobbing up with a butch of children. and to find out that they" ' are wives in name only, as Bertha Clay used to say. Nor do they want to marry men with some shameful blot on their past lives. Nor do they want to marry men. who have a record for being no-account and trifling. _ Mlshby few-girls would be idiotic enough to go on and marry .aman whose record showed that he was everything they didn't want. for a hus- band, for there are few sentimental Susies left now who holds to‘t.he'ali-' ' ' for~love-and-the-world-well-lost theory. So it puts the responsibility of ~ most of the disastrous marriages straight up to the parents.who.are_ so careless of their,daughter's futures that the will not even send o. post- card to the Maimr of the town the boys come from to find 'out what is the real name ofthe man their daughter is proposing to marry; ' '-4 “: You may be very sure that any young man who isn't willing to have his past life investigated has one that wcn‘t stand looking into. . - DOROTHY DIX _ DEAR DOROTHY DIX-I am a_boy of 22 living at home. Dad makcs'$200' a month. maybe a little more, but he is always swearing at me for mot working. I try hard to get a job. but I always get there too late. or I am too * young. so I miss getting it, Dad and mother are very old-fashioned and ob- ject to my going out to parties and dances. and Dad is always recalling things that I did five years ago. though none of them were very bad. and°he_ is always ready to‘ put the blame on me. I have no money and no other place I could go. -what would you advise me to do? BOB, Answer: S _ I would advise you to brace up and be a man instead of a whining' cry baby. Above all, I would advise you to go to work. I certainly dont blame your father for swearing at you for being a lazy loafer. It's a, pity `, he hasn’t enough grit to chuck you out of the door and tell you either to earn your own living or starve. _ - I know your type. hob. You are one of the boys who hunt for work praying Heaven they will not find it. That is the reason you always get' to a place too lat/e. just aft/er the hustlers who want to work have been hired. That is why you always lose a job when you get one. When anybody has to be dropped, you are the one who can be spared. _ __ In every business there is a constant weeding-out process going on" _ and it is the slack, uninterested, ineffcient men who are let go and the. energetic hustlers, who are up on their tiptoes trying to make who arekept. It isn’t._'a_`_question _of luck. It/s a. matter of performance. and the men who deliver the goods invariably succeed. _ ' So1`Bob. quit framing up an-alibi for yourself and see if V' a good-for-nothing. lazy loafer, A human sponge. Bleepi"r;)i§“lil(;e gif 5030?;-ie.' IHS. .ldllnlf around all day..golng to dances at night, holding _up your old mother and making her pinch the market money for a. dollar or tw to tak girls out on, and letting your father su o t . I 't th 0 5 Ord for B boy of 22? _ PP I’ y0L\ Sn at a shameful .' ‘ ` ' ' Consider this. Bob. Right now you are at the turning. point of your - life. You are deciding your whole future. lf ln the next year you don't B0 w W0rk and $\1Dl>0rt y0u1'S¢lf. you will be a. dendbeat the balance of your days. For lndolence is a slow. creeping disease that will numbyour ambl. tion and paralyre your energies. and once it has fastened itself on a. man he can never shake it off. You can cure yourself no f this d dl - ~~ 'U year from now it will be too late. W 0 ea y maladnbn what do you want to be ut 401 A mn ` ` ' ”` l¢“°W you? Or a tramp asking tor mrggzggogg back`d:‘;scE:§w?=‘al:-Y fam not always have a father to support you, and when he is gone youywiii'-.be too old to get a start in the world So I say go to work Bo ' , ~ _ . b, and make-:u ;r_\;n of yourself. Don t be that most contemptihle of allthings, a male perm- - -' DORUPHY Dlx." _._-_._ DE/in Miss mx-1 um engaged to a girl wb is u/mal A am at work at a good job that has future at its I hazge uzalxlgehzgngng ylior of high school and I am wondering if we can be h she has had more education than I have. _ ww together when .. ._ _ __ _ _ . nosmr. AIIBWGT! ' knowledge oes ot come. .- ~». _ ‘ -- ` and you may havg. Bcqiilred far~m°p:-sg e‘¢!:r\,id!ati.lo'§xl&ib°\?:siiri)::;mm¢°su` _ vvvolleze. You may be like me min or whom Whittier wma; "ae iwii- _ his own free bookless lore, th' if i i " dom__`that the fields and hills_f;,:ndnt‘:avl]1i:i(??\1}:'r||ul}\|dl:i b:‘d5:hthi‘:1’i1.:‘nd “-5- __: ., '_= . - , #9-_ _ -- -*Some of the moot intelligent men I have ever met ivere self-educntedand 'WGN graduates onlyfof the University of Bard Ku - You can ke up I hut ` ' Dr. Eliot's nv?-:oct shell :f booylgsualrg by Huang' “net you will not have to fear that your sweetheart will know more ,___ __ _ *___ _ _ nonomy nut. ~ .xrou:iw1c_nus'r nsrosrrs ummm nook! I' ` _ - _ --- mouunm Priilirlsivo. and pure deposits of . -__ "ss v°l¢=ll1ic_dustoocuronthoDeadmna Jarvis pm, is qmniy gimau gin,--o_o mum nom; of Abba;-un., annum on the Annum-ni-lu.; qi. "wh Cdnmbiez is lbw-pmuuuu bmmmwu mae-or them-uw , I ' south o`I Nliilit. 1 _ ' N' ` .`-t~`~_t`- .` ` "_»i`=."r"'7 ' ii iii tiiiiiti EEEK “ i §35§§E§ >§ _ _- 2 iris? iii? ual Ili ._ , .- .. .__....j;:£".i_iA _ _ ___|, __ _.._,..-...inn ~s...........__..»~<. .. _ ' l . I5 ._._...‘._ _I -.. t- . v I _ 4-, _ _ , l I l r l 5 E. R. BROW buns, and extra richness to cakes and plesimade from IPURIIV F;|lDUR_ Send 30¢ in nam): for our 700-rmzpe P'/nifty. flu//r Cook L l 2M I Wann Canada Flour Mills Go. Limited, H _- Toronto, Moon-ul, Otani, Quin Joh. ' -. ._ . \.,,' ,A §;_ _ ~L` ;_=~l . _,f`1'l:’-l.¢~¢,’. ,li , f ' At ` I qi . ,il /"_§§.3 \ _ i -s;\1`>_e>".{A§;_ g _. .._ Qt. .:..»:. zu 4'!/1. ai, if » cg _ /Z '¢` 1 ‘."§§~‘t;" _. \.. f..-‘ " "-`=`*_l`-.\;' \I 7 yi é / /'42 ,/ ., V, . . . .f //f."-4 ' _ 'A' L5 ,Moi 5 ~ , » fo __i;.;~;_~1'~j,L * ’ '. ` -|- -' . 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V i uuc S QW |=ox°°o . i $` mooiol ’< I _ i"-:ir BIC? \ . . ‘-:.14 f- - » -_“-1.4’ y a f r r . | ‘ ll liiPi‘£flii}i,t__§ J : -- f' ' ' ' 0 0 f t /U I _ ,.-' - ‘\~ -' V ,M .. _ t.. ' . '~--»-~~-f--5---» `\‘-,` ..» /' d Their Choice _ '- :l Q mi* _ A "44 ¢: f .__ 'ffldmlhnun ' _ For Assured Results Feed “nv11>ER1A1.s" - Manufactured by- _' » Imperial Biscuit co.. f Box 448, ` . 1' ._ i C