p5), Mont 1g coniei PAGE TWO .1.) ed Rose-bi. The New Ib- Bnown LnoeLAiY-b- u"; |5 good te be in a Roi! a or it would ngt Rose packagfi t-M GA Y’S PLANT Prices have been reduced on very many of our plants, but not the Iuailty, in keeping with the depress plants and prices. Annual bedding ed times, below we give n list of our Flower Plants, Aster, Phlox, Verbena, Snapdragon. Balsams, Scotch Marigold,Afrlcan Marigold, Cosmos, Sollp- lossis, Scabiosa, Dusty Miller, Caliiopsis, Sweet Alyssum, Larkspur, obeiia, Dwarf and Trolling Portula Balcony Petunia, 25c doz. postpaid. Dianthus Pinks, Petunia Ruilled an paid. Ricinus or Castor Bean 25c ca, Centaurea, or Bachelor's Button, Seedling Pansy, Salvia, Kochia, d Fringed, Zinnia, 35c doz. post- each. Stocks 25c doz. postpaid. firennials, Delphinium, Oriental Poppy, Pyrithlum or Persian Daisy, Dlfllllls or Foxglove. Canterburyllell. A year old plants, 20c each. Shasta Daisy, Forgetmenot, Sweet William, Pansy and Daisy (wintered over) 10c each. Vegetable Plants, oxira earl y Cabbage and Cauliflower 20c doz. 51.25 per 100, (‘clrry 25c doz. $1.50 per 100. Extra early Tomato 50c doz. Second early 40c, late 30c. Peppers. Cucumber, and llead Lettuce 25c doz. Carter 8t Co. Seed Store and F. ‘V. Woolworth Co. have our plants for sale, they receive them daily. We shall be pleased to have customers call It our gardens and personally select their plants, by bringing boxes and baskets, we can always give good service... Late Cabbage ready June 15th, l0c per 100. Late Cauliflower June note or express money order to ace 15th, 20c doz. $1.00 per 100. Postal ompany all orders. Address all mail )rders to J. J. Gay & S0n., Chariot trtown. l’. 0. Box 187. This advertisement appears 3375-5-3l-Tuc-Fn-9i. every Tuesday and Friday. Spinning and Yielding Send me your wool to be spun into yarn and wove into Blankets. The charges are: Single yarn 23 cents, doubled 26 cents per pound. Blankets $2.00 and if unlaundered $1.85. ll. takes five lbs. oi wool per Blanket. Wool must be well wash- rd and all dirt and burrs picked i nut. The size oi single yarn is med- ium and doubled yarn iine, medium and coarse. Put shippers name on all parcels and owners name, ad- dress and instructions inside. Send by mail or freight. Freight will be paid on 100 lb. lots. Wm. LANDRIGAN, 65 Queen Street, Charlottetown. Canadian National Railways Earnings The gross revenues of the Cana- tlonnl Railway for the week end- lnf June 21st, 1932 were-—$2,8’l'l,320 as compared with—$3.499,5'l3, for Vthe corresponding period in 1931, a. decrease oi‘ -$5'l2,253, F urness Red Cross Line S. S. “SILVIA ” Freight and Montreal 0h'town Passengers St. John's llIll4-5-28-sat-tue-4 months. on i-‘EED vmczs Gash Prices Beef Cheeks fléc lb. Beef Hearts .. 454w 1b, Beef Tripe 3434c 1b, Beef Trimmings _ 5p lb. Bcei’ Liver . 8c lb. Horse Meat ........ 4~Vic lb. Tongue Trimmings 3540 lb. Pork Liver 31/40 lb. Weasand Meat 4c lb. Credit léc additional per lb. with the exception of llorsc Meat which ls ‘Ac. Prices f. o. b. Charlottetown, ef- iective June 22. Island Gold Storage Company, Limited B883-6-23-tf. Leave Arrive Arrive Montreal Ch'town Ch’town and and leave for leave for St. John's Montreal June 20 June 27 July. 4 July 11 July 18 July 25 Aug. 1 Aug. 8 June l8 Jilly Z July 1G July 30‘ CARVELL BROS LTD. Charlottetown Agents, 6-22-tuth-tf. Bl-ssgzeni! v 62.31729! FEED the BALVES with B L A T C H - FORD’S CALF MEAL and watch them grow. (Continued) “Your father and mother are waiting for you," she said. "Go, and leave me here. I prefer to wait for the retum of your Indian friends‘ And I am not sorry because I tried to kill you!” He moved away from her to where Hebert and Jachereau and the simple minded Raudot lay on the ground. ‘This time it was the idiots coat he took, a fine coat made by the iclloits mother. The boy had loved birds and flowers, and on the lapel 0i the coat was a faded geranium bloom. Jeems t/ook it off and tucked it between the dead lad‘s fingers. Then he went back to Toinette and said, "We had better go." After that he added, "I am sorry. but I must go to my mother and father first." He staggered as he set out, and Tonteur hill dipped and wobbled before his eyes. There was an ache like o. spllnier twisting in his head, and as she followed him, Toinette oould see the effect of her unresist- ed blows with the iron gun barrel. For she d’d follow, out of the smoke fumes into the clearer air of the meadows and across them w the worn path that led to the Indian trail and the home of Catherine Bulaln. - “They're down there," said Jeems, and pointed, speaking to Odd more than to her. He took the hatchet from his belt and carried it in his hand. They entered the greater stillness of the Big-forest, and Odd, who had travelled between them, drop- ped back to Tofnettesfilde and thrust his muzzle against her hand. She did not snatch it away from him now. They came to the slope, and Jeems forgot that ‘Ibinette was be- hind him. He walked straight like a. tall thin ghostr-and the girl stop- ped and stood alone, staring at the place where his home should have been, a cry wringing itself at lest from her lips. Jeems did not hear. He saw noth- lng but the clump of rose bushes and the place where his mother lay. He went to her first, obvious of the other presence, unconscious of the slln, of the ruins still smoulder- ing, his soul stirring once more with the faint mad spark of incredulity. But she was dead. He saw her with clearer eyes, though he was sick with hurt. 1-le knelt beside her calmly for a little while. He touch- ed her face gently with his hand, and then went to his father. Odd trailed at his heels. In the stump field was a shovel. Under his moth- er's big tree he planned to dig. When he returned, his mother was nodding, filled to overflowing with crop lay waiting for spicy frosts to ripening seeds; they skirted the turnip field where a purplwbreasted give crispness and flavor to ‘its flesh. In a. place where fresh dirt was scattered about were tools used yesterday-axes and shovels and double-headed grub hoe which Hep- i sibah had made at Tonteurfis forge. 0n a. stump partly dug from the earth was one of Hepsibah’: pipes made of half a oomoob with a hol- low reed for a stem. Jeems stopped and looked about, his throat almost lensing for the old familiar call to Hepslbah. But the stillness warned him. Like a friend it was whispering the sacred- ncss of another trust. His eyes turn- ed to the lovely head near his llow llollern Women 1.6:; Pa}!!! offal m‘ “ W. u“ any miss e mornifll. B and fatty new. m6 vernmonlalremembereduaso oznclcsulnthoioodlnelr netivewwnendwnndersd theiradvanoedtheortol beard of the» death of the Our: "I was overcome with .107. Work ‘laugh andklssme.” ‘f-i Krusebm ceiling-w ma‘? land cum with nu wife mdguqgreexpelied dremnelsheretortaynvillnever go back to the little Russian town bythoGerman border. Heine. well known orchestra leader but time the stomach. h filgrsllnfll "P “d ‘ peclally Chopin's concertos. "But free W" biz-promoting all“ l!‘ 1mg;- gag-c; m. o... ht eyes, dear skin. cheerful and eharmifld 38""- Czarist Soldier Now Happy Here MONTREAL, June 27.—(By Th5 Canadian Press)—lt late, or rather,_early in the morn- ing. The patrons of one of Mon- night clubs were growing just a. bit weary. Pauses between dances grew 1011881‘ hickory prying poles and the big. gale health been so deep and gentle. if it were not for you." Tbinette. “They must have caught my uncle out there," he said, keeping his voice steady and gazing over forest tops of Forbidden valley. "He set the signal fire for us and then was killed. I would g0 and find him the “I will go with you," answered But Jeems turned west and did shoulder. In a moment Tolnot/te membe“ °r n“ mfliestra’ dotted raised her eyes to meet his. _a.nd even with his mother they mo not “m” "i 1°“ m”- “n “$1M” the ma.» of m; dining floor. m a man, a Pole, a French Canadian and a Russian, Albert Gerson, the leader of the orchestra. They re- minlsced and told the story of their younger years. Gersonb was the last and most romantic story. He told it quiet- Ly, in perfect English, with little explanatory gestures of his fine hands. As a youth of 16 during the Russo-Japanese war in 1905, Ger- son deserted from the Russian Im- not look back at his home or betray the choking in his breast. He found himself talking to ‘roinete as if she were the child of the old days, and he, changed into s man, were ex- plaining things. He described for the first time how the savages had come while he was on his way home from Luann’: place, and gave his reasons for believing they had departed in haste, leaving many things, like the gathered crops of fruit and grain, which they would surely have taken had they not been pressed by circumstance. He was sure they had not gone farther down the Richelieu but had turned back through Forbidden valley to the Mohawk country. Their own hope was to swing westward out of the path of stragglers, then east- ward again toward Lussorfs. 'l‘o- morrow or the day follewins. he would have her safely at the next seigneurle, and there she would find means to be taken to her friends in Quebec. He would then join Dieakau to fight the English. The important thing was to reach Lussanis tonight. The Indians would not go near there, for they believed all abandoned places to be inhabit- ed by ghmts and evil spirits. If they stumbled upon it by accident they would get away s5 quickly as pos- slble. He held her hand u darlmeas gathered closer. In this gloom she whispered: perial army into Germany after much wandering arrived in America. with praeticaly no bag- gage and three rubles. about 01-50- America. was-the land of promise and also the land of surprise. "Everywhere people read news- papers. It was beyond me; I 001116 not understand everybody reading newspapers. It must have been. I thought, some official proclama- tion, perhaps a scandal.“ Andi that was but the first surprise. "I membered as a child ‘God bury tho Czar’ and wonder- ed at the complex/System of 80- he still loves symphonies and os- then dance music makes people happy" he philosophi: u. | That night at home after telling Gerson rummaged through trunks. old bnea he hsd not looked in for years. And in the most dilapidated, he found the tu- nlc of a. 1B year old private of the Russian Imperial army. It was youthfully tailored. quite frayed and fraught with memories. Varied Patterns In New Chiffons PARIS, June zv-wm. o... weath- er warming up printed cretonnea here, and some of the emu-as are decidedly worth commenting upon. The "marguerite." or daisy pat- tern, is almost universally accepted and in such a quantity of divers arrangements that there is no thought of its beins done w In extreme. In one vcra‘ the daisies are pink and yellow on a belts background with lots of fresh bright green foliage. With the dies: of mu design in chifl011. or Printed cotton. there is a short cape jacket of solid green taffeta, if the drea la chiffon, or cretonne if it is oct- tnn, and a largo floppy straw hut trimmed with the very daisies out out and doubled and distributed l- round the shallow crown. The lady's slippers are white with tiny green bows tleing over the instep. Purse and, gloves are also white with green stitching for die former and a W10 ornament for the letter. TALKING Talking comes by nature, silence by understanding. and chiffons are having their hour- . Die ' “m3 d); of japan 9 W“ 768-1‘! and over have . 1100 to perfect it. Research by Fellowship. We This Fly-Tex, used in a new-e”, Fly-Tax sprayer, 333k; h, I room a cloud of perfumed mpg It is harmless in peo le stainless vvwonvonm ° t: 1t u "fu i‘ ‘o when used rightly, that no us...’ om escape. Use Fly-To: for our home's pm. toetion. Start w the first fly Zompietely costs from 1 to 2 cents, “|I."‘“-'rc>x QN LY 1A "llealeseeFch. Product This meanstoomuehtoyouand ours to use a. lesser method. Fly- ox is economical, for a litt e goes far. its is ran- teed, for eve lot la in our laboratory. t is based on flow- ers. m cloud it creates is agree- able, harmless and stainless. It is the latest, and best that Btiiencg has produced. Don't trust you; home FIOECUOI! to ways less cm. cient. ly-Tox is sold everywhm, Go get it now. Fly-Tex is made in Canada. The Eyes Have It With Little Veils MARIE. June 2'l—'.l'i1e eyes have it when it comes to Peeping through the mesh of those little new vella fashion has decided we shall wear with our berets. The ‘ideaof e. veil on a. beret is a little lneongroua to begin with, but there are any num- ber of ideas these days that have thrown our more conventional mind into a tailspin. When we finally land, however, and the dizziness has worn off. we are more than delight- ed with the amaze newness of m- varletlon put the veil on first your hair and then Mid the beret. A jeweled ornament may dip down over the temple as though in the veil. or flit heir, or both-but it is only caught to the very outer edge of the beret. GOOD HABITS“ Good habits are not made on birthdays, nor Christian cbnmw at the New Year. The workshop o; character is everyday life. Tho uh. eventful and commonplace hour u where the battle is lost or won ~Mlaltbie n. Babcock, n. o. Following the discovery tbs‘ political maloontents have increas- ed in England within the last year Sootlandjfard is prepared to put v. cheek on their activities. The de- crease, some time ago, of the force in the Special Branch, which dealt with plotters, gave many groups of ' malcontenta an opportunity to plot against the law with e. minimum of risk. The Special Branch is be- ing increased to its former status, and the plotters already realize that their movements will be ran-i dared more difficultu Secret meet- ings are again being resorted to to an effort to baffle the authorities. and as a result the younger delec- tives are working in groups under the instruction of men skilled in outwitting political plotters from Q every lend. non-so an“ one midi? runs l. ALBERT‘ ooenf Gilli-S AGREED HE WAS.OOOD-L.ODKINO DUT'SIHPLY IMPOSSIBLE .....‘I'OO BAD HE .. . NEVER SUSPECTED WHY MEN AT TNE OFFICE FOUND NIH CAPABLE AND NAlD-WDNKINGNITTNIY NISITATED TO HOMO?! HIM TNEbNLY GIRUTURNID HIM DOWN WHEN M! ASKED HER TO MAIIY HIM “B.O." A am. nausea "Does your arm hurt, Jeems?" "No. I had forgotten it." not alone. Tdnette W33 there, on msnAYcuucoocron-rmruo ~AND ADVISED ‘ "““‘ ““'““ -'--—-~v-..I-.».._.- ......._ ;“,_.‘ __, EYES TESTED FITTED E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR. 142 Richmond Street Optometrists ee-eoooe-o Professional Cards Stewart 8. Lowthei: J. D. STEWART, K. 0. N. W. LOWTHER BARBISTEBS, SOLICITORS, ETC. 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN McLEOD 8.. BENTLEY I. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Banister and Attorney-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN Office: 180 Richmond Street BELI.‘ 8. MATHIESON B. 11-. Bell D. L. Mathleson, LlcD. Barristers £2 Soliclto Money to Loan Ohariottetown and Montague ll. F. llacilllEE, Bj. BARRISTEB. SOLICITOB. NOTARY, &o., Blley Building. Charlottetown. 5711-2-84 month. l.l.llacilonald,li.ii. BABBISTER. SOLICITOB. he. Riley Building Charlottetown. P. l2. Island. Money to boon and Collections given the very beat attention. llb-l-d-lmonth. MARK R. McOUlGAN BARRISTER. NOLIICITOR. ETC. MONEY TO LOAN Bones-on Bloch!“ ‘ “ -.P-l-l Banana-a- CZickMaQ Bring up the YOUNG CHICKENS on _ Blatchio is Egg Mash both sold by Garter & 00., u Seed and Feed Store — We deal m all gnues and sizes, but in one quality-that ll, the very best. That is why so many of our customers leave their coal needs en- tirely to us. They know our meth- ods. w. c. one s. c». ‘room: m the ground, with the English wo- man's head in her lap. Her eyes blazed up st Jeems, andaomethlng like defiance was in them, some- thing was possessive and challeng- ing and which hid whatever pity she might have had for him, or pleading for his forgiveness. Her hands were pressing the cold face of the woman she had wanted to hate, and she continued to look at Jeems, so hard, so terribly, so understand- ingly that she seemed almost to be waiting for him to punish her with a blow. Then she bowed her head over his mother, and the shining veil of her hair covered death. Under the big tree he began in d'g. D D I D I I It was late afternoon when they left the valley, a still, slumbering _ hour when the sun was about to go to its early rest, leaving glows and sunset paintings behind that might have been made of swimming met- ala. ‘roinetteb hand lay in Jeema‘ as they went. They were like young god and of e savage world with a strengt” wrought out of fire. The sickness was cared for by fingers as gentle as his mother's had been. Hot tears caressing his flesh from Toin- ette's dark lashes had cured his physical pain. Words gpoken in a voice he had never heard from her lips entrusting his forgiveness for ‘years of misunderstanding were like the peace of the day itself about h's heart. Out of ruin she had rais- ed saul to splcnd'd heights oi cour- age and resolution. They passed h's mother's gerdenil] you?" "And your face-where I struck FRANKLY TOLD HIM WHAT HIS FAULT WAS LIFEBUOY goddess ready to face the hazards - had left Jeems. His wounded arm ‘ "I had forgotten that, too." Something couched his shoulder lightly. He oould not tell what it was, for they were 1n a pool of‘ darkness. But. whatever it might have been, s, falling leaf, a. twig, even shadow itself-it filled him with a strange excitation. Out of the wreck of a world obliterated in a scourge of horror he had s soul beside his own to flint for. (To Be Continued domino: Iduedoallthetmorbooome e 111111: Who dares do more, is none. Shakespeare. (Macbeth, Act I.) By how much uMXMded, by so much , We must awake endeavor for de- fence; For courage mounteth with occu- lm. . Bhskespesrer. (K. John, Act I!) 5x7 ENLARGEMENT FREE wlthesch roll fllln. 5lfl-llzgoll printe ll ll- llluiuicl prints cash with order. Mall trial roll. You'll be delighted l Dept. C. lllillllll Sllllllll MONCTON NB WEDDING BELLS NEXT MONTH t . NO 8.0710 SPOIL ms camels NOW WE'RE fooling °w|,,,_md nqbgdy cu. .-'whea we say “I'm not worried about "no. -»a u... " be w. uwwhunq: who "31)’, rul: on- nodes 171111 "- w ski .4310‘ i‘ wit?’ pzgulariryi ri ,crearnyle _ -—euda all danger o offending. Canplcxlonrgrmndlad ljfelmoy‘ pure, deep-cleansing lather gent-iv of clogged illi- pg nc-till they glow with ., new youthful radiance. - Adopt Ufebuoy today. I-IYII IIUHIII hill "--oot the ofiender. _ Wash and bathe with Life _ . ltl char rifiea and dndmw W" I'M sore Youuuxe ur. o‘ some owners wanna mm sou oouw scnoa mem- evsu m ou umzo we coco row DISHES mo museums -§§»Zl:4i"\"_-' woracuentvouoon‘: looxasnnrco- ooovv j l These richer, enforced: at!“ loot longer, too YOUem truatyour finest optoonl and imm- wlllte or coloure- Rinse’ Millions do-lw-bi fcrcop, Rinaogiveetwlceumncllludl a urchin, puEed-up sosysi Recommended by Illa makers of 40 time“: withers-great for ~ . e Q00. gag‘... fill“... KR", f, u, egentleclto. 11,, “dam, m, (s. rub, maternal ditllpdll of flowers where choice bloom; were n3. .. , , .. 1 » - . ... V. ~....,.,.....w.... ..c.....~.~..-,,,.-»-.-,....m.».mw.-~.w~~ ».-. . t» . . , ,. ..,..,........,.»._,>. m... —y—vrwllffi->tv¢l.vvv w wuwvvl1‘ . wow-app“... w»... \. . .. , .......,.~» ..v-»»ms-qvq"rrawr—-w ‘W’ '