your Pittsburgh Puini dvnlcr today‘ Men's Worsted SUITS, reg. 39.50 .. 24.50 Men's TOPCOATS, new stock, reg. 34.50 19.50 Men's Dress PANTS, worsted . . 3.95 to 9.95 Men's all wool Pullover SWEATERS-— Men's Station Wagon COATS . . . . . . 27.50 Men's Dress SHIRTS. stripe . . . . . . . . . . 1.95 Men's Fleece COMBS. . . . . . . . . . Men's all wool Plaid JACKETS . . Men's all wool Plaid SHIRTS . _. . . Men's Leather JACKETS . . . . . . . . Men's CAPS, "new patterns" . . . . Men's wool felt HATS . . . . . . . .. Men's Work BOOTS USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN The GREENDAL 0o. Ltd. MEN'S AND BOYS‘ WEAR 144 Great George Street v Lonely Parade Fannie lfurll With angry protective gesture, Burl caught the hand of his lu- ture father-in-law as Sierra mash. ed him down into his chair. "Fath- er, you're not yourself," said Sierra, or you wouldn't have done that." His gray face whipped by the gale of what had taken sudden possession of him, the stocky body threw hold of him with a wrench.. Like a bull charging, he rushed across the room tmvard the bbok. shelves, his head low, his brggth. ing audible. his usually quiet eyes foscusing crazlly. "What's left of my life, such as it is, is mine. You're going to listen, now that you've got your pick o! happiness out oi life, to what I've had out of mine. Pilmbling frenziedly along the bookshelves that lined the south wail of the room, the moth-color- ed figure of John Baldwin shot completely outside his control, His 3.95 to 7.95 3.50 8.95 6.95 .. 14.50 . . . knees knocked and the trembling of his body rippled his suit. ... “Father? cried Sierra. rushing after him, her hand out to rc- strain him, "don't fly apart this may. Florence didn't mean-m "I did. I did. I did]. shrilled Florence, beating with her clench- ed lists against the upholstery of the divan. “I did. Mother's not cold yet. What \\']ll people say!" Hurling hooks from the shelves as if they were bricks, John Bald- win, his wet lips moving, threw oil Sierras repeatedly restraining hand. "You're going to listen. It's just as well to get it out! All of you now, here, tonight, are going to listen." "But, Father, why are you tear- lng books off the shelves in that fashion? Stop it. Father. stop it." . .. 3.95 Vallevileld And Vicinity Mr. Zenas Golding was in‘ Mon- WKW Salurdfly ‘m business‘ the u eek before she did. her to die! Day and night I want- Mr. Harry VanBusklrk went to Nova scotia recently on business. ists said there was hope. I took these pictures and had them en- larged Mrs, Jack MacKenzie has re- turned from a visit with her rela- tives in Cape Breton. ish to wish her dead. look! Look at them as I have look ed at the living reality for fifteen years. Don't turn your head! as I've looked. Rev. and Mrs. A0. Fraser and‘ son Lloyd are visiting for two, weeks at 5t. Ann's and vicinity,- Cape Breton, Mr, and Mrs. George Jardine and family, Freetown, were recent vis- lS left. Lock!" 19°" B‘ ‘he h°m° "1 Mr- 9nd M“ There she was. Mamie Trehane AleX Mlfiiin- toast of Silvertown, caught One big advantage with a new floor of Armstrong's Asp almost endless opportunities for original designs. l It comes'in a wide range of plain and marbleized colours. And, since it is in- culled one tile s: s time, you can create your own pattern-to harmonize with any colour scheme, to make n narrow room look wider, to make any room more ertrecri vei Another definite advantage is rim Arm- etrong’: Asphalt Tile costs less now than This mo... nnnsraons floor can be less than pre-vlar cost! alt Tile is that ir offers yoursat "We designed our own paiiern, tile by file!" it did back in 1939. Upkeep cost is a minor item, too. This modern flooring withstands wear, stays new-looking for many years, with only occasional washing Ind waxing. i Flooring contractors everywhere in Canada are installing attractive modern floors of Armstrong's Asphalt Tile. Ash - any Armstrong contractor or dealer in your locality to show you colours and Jample floor designs, or to give you aI accurate, free estimate; 9 Armstrong Cork Canada Limited 94 Prince William Street, Saint John, N. B. "Here they are! I snapped them I wanted ed her to die. I prayed not to want it, because even after fifteen years, there were a couple of the special- so that when I looked at them it would not seem too devil- Now you Look, do you hear me. lookl You'll look Look, and then dare to deny me the right to what in Maritime Life /7L¢'/I fQ/Q/J)‘. I 'l‘. W. BENTLEY, C.L.U.. Manager l2’! Grafton Street Charlottetown. P. E. l. Box No. 4S3 dreadful notion, photographed skulking in her den. There she was again and again; she who had been Mamie Trehane, the lusty beauty oi boom towns, in all of her dreadful defeat. "Look, and reproach me if you dare! look, or I'll rub your eyes in it. Look, 1 tell you. Look." Suddenly, as the door swung open to reveal Carrie with a load- ed champagne tray, the cacophon- ous greetings to the new century began to spill from chimes and bells, horns, catcalls, shouts, sirens, elongated steamboat ivhistles from the harbor, spraying and braying sound as they mounted to heaven in rocket after rocket of disem- ance. 1900! The twentieth centuryl Quietly, in the midst of it, Sierra walked over to her father, wrench- ed the fan of portraits from his fingers, laid them face down on the piano and. cupping his head against her breast, held him as one would s. chlld., CHAPTER III On the New Year's day of the turn of the century, a blustery one with a. wind that ran up under her yellow mink dclman cape, Sierra Baldwin, her hands rather primly within her small barrel of yellow mink nuft and her hair drawn austerely beneath her yel- low mink turban, hurried up the stoop of a large brown dwelling in East Seventeenth Street that had obviously undergone tortuous architecture and facade changes in its transition from an erstwhile handsome family dwelling to an - apartment house. East Seventeenth Street at the close of the century was a resi- dentlal street that was destined, sooner than it realized, to suffer violent neighborhood changes. Rows oi conservative families. about to be forced to migrate by the deterioration going on toward ’l"hii'd Avenue, still lived conserva- tively behind heavy lace curtains and dined in heavy walnut base- ment dining rooms. The middle floor in one of the first to be renovated of these rows of somber mausoleums was oc- cupied, so stated the name plate above the doorbell, by Miss Amos and Miss Mullane. To sierra, any approach whatsoever to the apart- ment of because nowhere in her experi- ence, at her various schools and, certainly not since her year in a girls‘ seminary in Switzerland, had she experienced the kind of com- patibility she now enjoyed in the combined personalities of Char- lotte Praag Ames and Katherine, Mullane. Oi beginnings less adventurously picturesque than that of the Mull- anes of Kerry Patch, St. Louis, the Praag family, of pedigreed Dutch origin that stemmed back to Man- hattan's early settlers, had once been financially and socially re- presenstative in New York, a back- ground from which the Charlot- tenburg could sometimes seem to want to shake herself free, in pro- portion to the degree Kitty tried to accent it. It was the manner in which Charlotte Praag Ames, overweigh, forthright and foursquare, had fallen out of stride with the goose- step oi her class, which had first caused her to charge into Sierras experience. It was literally upon a charging mare that the char- lottenburg had first ridden into Sierra's life. (To be continued) LIVING IS CHEAPER. NEW DELHI - (CM-A spokes- man fa: the ministry oi labor said recently that present living costs in India are not higher than those in the United States, Britain and Canada. He explained that it was erroneous to compare cost of living in the different countries on the basis of cost oi living index num- bers, as there were many varia- tlons. lllllSTllilli IlElLEllS It. C. MeeMlllen 1, rum so, eunmmwn Crockett .& Storey Ltd. Kan st, iilarlottetewl lmillmen’: Limited m Water on, Slnnorslde _ .1. l. llerrleen, r. o. m m. Sllllrtllll before gratiin was perform immediately. m" Pail‘ Wflilld hi"? later secured his amounted to a ladder to a heavenlengineering from McGlll University. v'alk, as visiting high churchmen march into the church for ceremony. SEPTEMBER 27, 1949 - Special Service Marks iiolseoratlel 0i Seveltl llslel 0i linger: Rt. ‘Rev. Walter E. Bsgnall was consecrated as seventh Bishop of Niagara at a special service held in Christ's church cathedral. Th; church, built in 1875, was recently renovated for important event. Clergymen, who came from all over country. are shown lininl the ride- Former Islander Dies In iialifax The following obituary is from a Halifax Exchange: Maitficld Lea Boswell, 154 Ccburg Road. well known in Halifax busi- ness and professional circles, passed away early Thursday, Sepiember 22nd in hospital at Cheticamp. He failed l0 recover from a hcart at- tack suffered about two weeks ago during a visit he had paid to the Capo Breton ornmunity in the interests of his firm. In his passing death has claimed on two successive days men who ihad occupied the post of Chairman inf the Halifax Board of School ,Commlssi0ners, for Mr. Boswell i headed the board for 1930411 after two years service as a commis- sioner. Ycsieniay Frank M. O'Neill I who has also been Board Chairman, lpassed away. Mr. Boswell had another link educational systsn of [with the {Halifax fcr he later was appointed Superintendent of Buildings, being in that post from August 1934 to May 1942. l A native of Victoria, Prince Ed- wvard Island, Mr. Boswell studied lat Prince of Wales College and degree in civil At the time of the Ocean Termin- al development he was an assist- ant to the chief engineer on that big undertaking. During the First World War he served with the Engineers in both France and Italy as a commission- ed officer. Later on his return to Halifax and discharge fruzn the scr- vices he become connected with the firm of A. N. Whitman Ltd. which was later dissolved. During the Second World War Mr. Boswells services were accept- ed by the National Research Board and he was appointed to the Angus ishops in Montreal, where he spec- iialized in research connected with [the production of tanks. Buffered lleert Attack lvlore recently he was connected with the firm of Robin. Jones and Whit-man. and it was during a trip »to Ghetlca-mp to visit the branch there that Mr. Boswell suffered the illness that claimed his life. About two weeks ago he had felt ill and returned to his hotel to rest. short- iy after, he suffered a heart attack. Since that time he has put up a valiant fight for life in the hospital to which he was admitted. In yachting circles his absence will be keenly regretted, for he was one of the most enthusiastic mem- bers of the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht Squadron and was secretary for some years. His friendly man- ner made him s. popular cccnpanlon aboard the craft of the Squadron, as it did in the ranks of the vari- ous organizations with which he was identified. A member of mrt Massey Church, he served several years on the Board of Management. He was also ______?i a. member oi Virgin Dodge of the Masonic Order. The North British Society was one of the organiza- tions which held .an especially warm place i.n his heart. Mr. Bos- well rvas also identified with the United Service Institute and Corn- wallis, Branch. Canadian Legion. Surviving are his wife, the for- mer Miss Dorothy Whitman; and a daughter, Mary (Mrs. G. N. Sel- larsi. now residing in England. A brother. Keith and sister. Elsie. 1'9- side at Victoria. The funeral was held Saturday from his late rrsldence, ncv. D. M. Sinclair, Fort Massey, officiating. wiih interment in Camp Hill ccm- eiery. Editorial Tribute The following editorial tribute to Mr. Boswell appeared in the Hall- fsx press: I "Max Boswell was closely identi- flecl with the modernization of the port ol Halifay. As an engineer he was one of the executives who trans- formed ancient waterfront facilities to those which now can and have served the world's largest vessels. "A native of Prince Edward ls- land and a graduak of MoGill Uni- versity, he came to this city in the years before the First World War and he remained to became one of its best known citizens. He parli- cipaled in many undertakings and sewed both as the chairman of the School Commission and as an offic- ial of that board. "But life was more than work to Max Boswell. He was a man with a great many friends in all walks of life, especially among War Veter- ans of whom he was one and in the services. He was particularly active in yachting and for years was a member of the executive q the Royal Nova Scotia Yacht squadron. and there his knowledge and his friendship will be greatly, missed. "Max Boswell made n. contrlbnp tion to the life of this community, to its growth and improvement Hi] interest in its welfare never flag- ged and the news of his death after a brief illness, the seriousness of which many were unaware. comes as a deep shock to the whole ol Halifax." . I PLUMBING EXPERT '1 PORT ELIZABETH. South Ai- flqg ... (c?) _.. A native was sen- tenced here recently to six months‘ imprisonment and six strokes for removing a complete lavoratory system from a hotel. PAL‘. my XIV-SIGHT IIOM A PIG’! III-Dr. Mahmoud Lentil. well-known " - Egyptian ocullet, examines s section oi n pig's eye which he removed it to the eye of his patient The delicate operation at a Cairo hospital, and results were not announced UPI-iii Willi‘ NEW LOW PRICE IPIICTIMI TODAYI w. n. JENKINS trsvleslel Iltlrillili‘ Unreal Never before hos such value been oilered for so liiile! imunninxi Reduced $13 on a ' Nowilhe devaluation of the British pound Sterling- makes the eye-catching Hiliman‘ Minx Magnificent more than um‘ . . . the beat buy for your money! FEATURES ll IDVHIACEDVRIHIIIMINTS POUND Oil N0 0Tllll lllTlSll CAI Ill ITS PllCI IHIGI IOOTIS MOTORS LIMITID: 170 Iey Street, Toronto . . . Montreal Airpell! Derval - 1i 509-10 Rogers lldgs; Grenville 9.; Vancouver