TIiCéQCSCU m: WESTERN n"'”i ‘flflNT-MPI. John Pond. l0‘! sumuasrnl. sun rumor coup-E; GUARDIAN Harvard Street n," g" W}? pm, Bublorioihll. Ailflflllhg should be rm mu Mn. Pond "TITS-Ran |nmsrside:—' mu Bookstore. Water lk Toronto BIIIPI. Water St Th» Guardian will be delivered to any homo h, Boy at Z6 i!" dl! o! 10o per week. Phone 289 for this lervico or “"71” “'7'” “u, 5' "l! 0i tho following stars; in Gourll w- °é-i’iéif‘t‘l'°l~..'.'.i'.'tl. ‘l: i! ‘m your order to the boy responsible for deliveries on your roars. f"? 4mg column is rol ed for new: pl local Interest h advertising ,1 s newsy nature may be insert- gj ‘i 2 cents a word strictly DI!- mc in advance. ,ATTEND clearing auction sale mwemises W. D. Profltt, Mar- po on Tuesday, Dec. 5th. L-63 Me t, Beef Trflpe ,,;?,".§..’§$5§nd all kinds of not! w (o); leeo at Bruce's. L-40-l2-4-2i. _MEN'S TRAVELLING SETS in [Qndefilil values at Taylor Drug co, Kenslnllilm- aBBING 0R ship your foxes to w be pelted. We guarantee ex- cellent service. Our prices are re- duced from lustfyeariltirhfwlgomln- " F urs, m . "Nu" m‘ L-33-l2-2-2i. -WANTED experience maid or Musegscpcr. Phone Z62 or apply yygglly Busier, 210 Water Street, gummcfsidc. 14-53- _.||0RSESHOES, Nails and toe- l“ moi in stock at Blriiifil-iimbm. -SPEEI) FOR SALE CHEAP- m; year old Pax Volo, Dam puma Watson. P. l... Bowness. Emma-side, 11-65-12-441. wMARlTIME FUR POOL LTD. -W. Chester S. McLure, represen- btiir, will be receiving furs on wnslgnment in Summersidc, Wed- ngdyv and Thursday, er 5m and 71h, at the Queen Hotcl sample Rooms. Bring your furs w. :1)‘ cash advance on receipt 01 ms, L-6l-12-4- i. -l-‘Ult BUYER at B. Graham Rogers‘ office, Summerside. Mr. y, N. 0'Bryan of Holt Renfrew C0 Lid, will begin buying again on Friday morning of this week and will lomain here for some dayu. 11,151; an opportunity to get cash prices for your furs. Bring in your pviis to office of B. Graham Roi! us, 5ummerside_ IFM'I2'4‘SI- -MISSION BAND CONCERT -— Avery dcll htful concert was pre- nieo on hursday evening by the first... nited Band of ‘Prinity U Church in Epworth Hall. Th firs? was under the direction J-larold Nicholson and Mm Ef- lie MacKay. Miss Margaret Davies accompanied on the piano for the many charming songs sung by the I little tots who took part. The iliidren were heartily cnoorcd at tile conclusion 0f each piece. iir. Davies presided-S AIANDICRAFT FOR PRISON- ' H Char- is inc on uplan, to secure knittinz machines and additional books for the library at the County Jail. She ha: been instrumental in equipping ten of thc thirty-five jails in he lfalitimes with libraries of one hundred books each. Hughes‘ idea with regard to the butting machines is that it will leach the inmates of jails a worth- iiile handicraft and the pro- ducts cf their industry can be used l0 advantage by the Rkd Cross S0- iietv and other organizations sup- ygilis soldiers with various articles thtlr comfort. I PERSONALS —Miss Lauretta Ibcky of Welling- lilg is visiting friends in Montreal. -Miss mmocm Ga/udet n. n, m: last Friday on a visit is ends in Halifax, u, s, V —-Mr. Wilfred Hammiil has re- turned to hi; home in Freetown grim a pleasant visit to Montreal.- .~\Mrs. Mary E. Maclellan of llrrnwlid left on Saturday for Bos- iii“ l0 spendthe winter months-S N ,____ _, _ ,_ Christmas Carols __ Through the Age] , DECK run l-IALL wrru . noLLv milcolilfhc hull with boughs of _ Y» TI! ihe season to be jolly, n we now ourga apparel, Troll the ancient hneimu Inoarrol , , 3s e Yule season celebrated in fraiyiye before the bin-mum m, “and r festival was held. Hells nilnlcigorfi: flaws!!!“ M’ “'1 "lhisil- "nus dialed-aloha‘: Ion Nlelbrffilai: the Ibirlt of time 18 Shopping out. ~_ Till Chg —NO. 12 SILVE M Burner. lowest mo]: at ggargehpase L'48-IZ-4-21. —DANCE l2 Hamilton Wgdnegigglixle Mg“. Admission 20c L-6"I-l2-4-Z.. —RESEBVE Dec. 14th for an- ggfille aftgnoong Wgangndchiigsle o; articles. Ladies Social Cl b 'I‘rin. 1W United Church. u ' 1,-55_ —ClllN-A. Glass and Silver, beau- 14-48-12-441. —SPECIALS m PERMANENTS for month December at the Dlithefi Bfllliy Parlor. Kenslngton. llvllilzired Bmhop, Beautician. Phone —ATTEND clearing auction sale 0n Dremisos of W. D. Profitt, Mar- gate on Tuesday, Dec. 5th. L-68. -—IIORSE BUGS at old 1939 pric- es. for a short time only at Braces. L-40-12-4-2l. —I*'UR FARMERS OF PRINCE COUNTY-We want 1000 silver fox furs in two days. We prefer the Sill/QTY types. Look us up at Sum- mersidc Wednesday, December 6th, and Thursday December 7th_ct the QilWIi HOME] Silmple Roqms, This is you!‘ rtunity m market, your furs. Ca and see us-Fur BRWN- L-6l-12-4-3l. —'I‘O0K SERVICES —Mr. Bur- leigh Taylor lay reader in St. Paul's Church, Ch'town took the services on Sunday in St. Mary's Church, Sllnmersids and st. John's church, St. Eleanors’. Rev. Mr. Harrison, rector, conducted the services in 51;, Paul's Church on sunday.--S -oun FACILTIIESfor ling your elts are still at your service. sh pments are oing for- hand- Lh. fibehdinfl a few months tifui' display at Bruce's, ’ L-10'I2-11-28-5L 215*‘ Wm"? I Tignish am. Melville. Hemphill ma ms misfortune of f her mp. sllina I-nd injuring Eleanor Hogan left W“ for Montreal on Monday, Nwsmbe; 31 yzehera she intends to spend the wm- r. On Wednesda eve um,- ers o; 115mm aha wglhfilytlglitlicrca wuhold a mee in with IB-"mnll onudmtho hog grim The meeting was addmssed by Mr. Clay of Charlottetown and by Mr. Reid of Kensinglon. uite a large number of farmers a mlded the meeting. lvllss Charlotte Dalton has return- ed to her home in Tlgnish after visiting (:0 friends lll Boston, Mass. Mrs. Claud Kinch spent Wednes- day in Charlottetown visit her dfi-l-Ilhtel‘. J nette Kinh is taking Comgrllerclal at Nhtro" Dame Academy. Mrs. Clarence Morriszey has gone to Summersido where she inland; whom‘; some time as the guest o! s. J. J. McNally. Mrs. . J. MacDonald who was s. patient in Prince County Hospital as returned to her home in '11s- month's convalescing after Mr. William McKenzm of Bqswn, Mass. is visiting friends in Tignlsh. Mm Jfl-Ynes AyiWard is now a pa- tient in the Prince County Hospital, Mr. Brenton Woods, C. N. R. plumber of Charlottetown. spent a few days in Tignlsh 1m; ligg a pump in the new C N R restr -m in ignsh Mrs. James Klnch of Tfgnlgh 15 steadily improving from her serious Operation in Prince County Hospital The many friends of Mrs, Ernest MoTaaue are xiao to know she again is able to be out after her prolonged illness. S TALIN zfra!“ mac 1) Diplomatic quarters were inclin- ed to view the suggestion as orgln. Wflfd to London, Mon eal and New York almostfidaily as in prov- l ious years. Before marketing your] Deli-B see us. The Dominion Silver Fox Furs, Limited. L-aa-lz-z-ai] -WOMEN OBGANIZE r-‘oni WAR WORK -After the organiza-i tion meeting of the Red Cram $0:- lety at S'side on Friday evening the women held a. meeting to organize a committee for war work. Mrs. . Ennis Smith and Mrs. Parnell Mac- Mahon were appointed yoint-ctm- venors for war work. It . expect- ed that the committee will be able to have one of the rooms in the Armoury‘ for their meetings which will be eld every Friday afternoon for the ur-pose of giving out sup- les an meivfng articles. Several ranch committees were oppomtcd, each with a convenor and ossszants ‘Ilhe Branch Committees one as follows: Hos ital Supplies - Con- Mlrs eanor Green, R. N., and Mrs. L. A. Moore: Wool Com- mittee, Coinvenor, Miss Gladys Hol- man: Pirrclmsing Committee, Con- venor, Mrs. Edwin Tanton; Cilttlnf: Committee, Convenor, Mrs. W. H. MacKle. Distributing and R/ficeivirg Committee, convenors, Mrs. Smith and Mrs. MacMaihon A member frond the following organizations will represent their organizations: I. O. D. E, Canadian mgian. C. W. L. Rcbokahs, Orange Lodge. Trinity Social Club and G.rl Guides-S Mail For Germany DEPARTMENT OF THE SECRE- TARY OF STATE, OTTAWA. The Acting Secretary of State of Canada and the Postmaster General, announce that Thor. Cook 8a Son, Iflmltcd. 68 King Street West, Toronto, have been appoint- ed licensed intermediary for the forwarding of harmless social mes- sages to persons in enemy orencmy occupied territory, Private letters to enemy or enemy occupied territory through a neutral country are now allowed to be forwarded at the sender's risk as to delivery in the country o! destination, subject to th’ usual conditions of censorship, when sent through the intermediary of the above firm. Letters cannot. however, be forwarded t to enemy or enemy occupied terri- tory. British subjects and others in Canada wishing to communicate with relatives or friends in enemy or enemy occupied countries should forward such letters to os. Cook 6e Son, Limited, ‘Toronto, accompanied by a remittance of 50c to covcr the expense of trans- mitting the letter to a neutral territory; the transmission from there to the enem counm’. and the transmission o the reply the sender in Canada. letters in . ed for transmis- sion to enemy or enemy occupied countries should as brief as possible, and should in all cases have the inner cover left open in accordance with th» enemy Cen- gqrshlp Regulations. 5:1 should be confined entirely to private and family notes. ' ithout any reference whatever to military or naval move- rnenis or to political and economic conditions. _.____-_-_-__ T0 REPRESENT s1‘. I. X. ANTIGOINIBH, N. s., Dec. s- Donald Dickson of Campbelltnn, N. 3,. will represent st. Francis Xavier University at the National Confer- enco of Canadian University Stud-- ents to be staged Dec. 27 at Mac- Donald college. S .Anns. Qile- H! also will represent the Xavcrian Weekly at the Canadian University Press meeting which will be held in conjunction with the Confer- e oe. “Frank Smythe and Daniel Galil- von of Sydney, N. S, will represent it. P. X. along with Mr. Dickson at the Conference. .______€___. Use llhnd‘: for deli!"- ating with Germany. or resulting from the natural fear of Denmark, Sweden and Norway that they might be next in line for Soviet "proposals." If. as some contend, the Russian invasion of Finland may prove to be a decisive point in the second great war, its exact role k not yet apparent to diplomatic and polit- ical observers in the British capital. Moscow's decision to use force against Finland has brought a- bout a sharp cleavage among ruling Soviet politicians, the diplomatic correspondent of the Sunday Dispatch wrote today. Not only are "moderate" and "lmllcrlalist" elements at odds, but the use of force is so unpop- ular among tho Russian masses that the Kremlin concealed the existence of war as long an it could, the correspondent said. "Stalin's great fear is that even- tually Britain, France, G-ermany and Italy will combine against Russia. It is this fear that won him over from his earlier determination-Jo MICEERSI achieve his objectives in Fin‘ard soley by means of diplcmatc “presslll'€," the correspondent said. “Against this possible combination of European pcwers he wants to build what he calls a ‘wall around Russia to shut off the bourgeois world." The oorrespcndcnt said the Sov- iet Unions aims in Finland are: , 0F PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND In the Probate Court, Novemlber . ., 939. In Re Estate of James W. P. Jenkins late of Glenfinnan in Queen's County in the said Prov- lince, Farmer deceased, tcstate. . To the Sheriff of the County of ,Queen's County or any Constable or literate person within said County Greeting: Whereas upon rcodinfl tho poti- tion on file of Russo Clar of Mount Stewart, in Queen's County, aforesaid. Merchant, the Adrnlnis- . trator cum testamenio annexo do ybonis non of the above named estate praying that a citation may ‘be issued for the purpose here- inafter set forth: You an there- fore hereby required to cits all persons interested in the said Estate to be and appear before the Judge present at a Probate Court to be held in the Court House in Charlottetown jn Queen's County, in tho said Province on Thursday the fourth day of Jarr- uary next c , at the hour of eleven o'clock orenoon M the same day to ew cause if any they can why the Accounts of the said Fistula should not be passed and the Elstate closed as prayed for ln said petition and on motion A. James l-Iaslam, 1341., Proctor for said Petitioner. And it is hereby ordered that a hereof be forthwith p - fished n some newspaper p in Charlottetown aforesaid once in each week for at least foiuwconsecutive weeh from the date hemoof and that a true hereof be forthwith ted in following public es zwomtivo- ly. namely. in I of to. l-lo in Charlottetown aforesaid, in front of the school- house in m aforesaid and thereof. Witness his Honour Harold LflfllB-fd Palmer. udd! the said Probate Court at Glar-lottetown aforesaid. tho day and year first above written, 3v tho ) 511mm LOWTIIER. lat . lrbl-lfl-li-"lelg-lBl-lg. 4k DE GU AND PRINCE COUNTY CHRONICLE "1_ Seizure of strategic points that will give her complete mastery of the Baltic; ‘2- 391111118 of Finland's Karellan Province and her own Knrejlan Province in an ‘autoncmous’ Finn- ish Soviet Republic." The K161111111 Plans to leave Fin- land in a "Nominaily independent condlticn, but subject to Soviet supervision in foreign and military policy," the writer added. Stalin will then proceed to his other ob- jectives. which ore: "i. An immediate move in the Balkans, by seizure cf Bsssarabia from Rumania: "2, Actions aganst Sweden and Norway to obtain entire control of the Baltic, also a p:rt on the North Sea; "3. Further action in the spring to extend still further Russia's in- fluence in the Baikans." SCORE DIRECT __K_(Continued __from puggwl) "A direct hit was scored. Parts of the swbunarine and other xvreck- age were thrown high by the ex- plosion and the surface of the sea became coated with oil gver a large area. The aircraft remained over this position for five minutes to look for survivors but none was seen." Britain's new policy of seizing German exports was her answer to the German magnetic mine which has been planted indiscrim- inately in sea lanes of the North Sea and off the east coast by sub- marines and pianes, It ls designed primarily to prevent Germany from building up a supply of for- eign currency through sale of her goods. This economic retaliation for Germany's mine warfare was expected to have profound cf- fect on the war and may shorten it appreciably by hit- ting Germany in one of her most vulnerable spots, her shaky financial syltom. Tho Heligoland raid was the air attack since Nov. a1 Air Fbrce machine- unned Nazi seaplanes at their Bur um base in the Frisian Islands. The first bombing attacks of the war on German naval bases were first British 28 when at tha entrance to the Kiel Canal Sept. 4 when a German pocket battleship was damaged. A week later a raid was made on the Isle of Bylt, site of a big Ger- man air base off the west coast of Schleswig-l-Iolstein and bombs grist missed hitting the Hinder:- r. d“ Sept. 23 German warships were attacked off Heligoiand, and another raid over l-feligoland and Wilhelmshavcn was announced Nov. 2'1. Prime Minister Chamberlain de- ayed operation of the reinforced blockade until tomorrow to soften the effects on neutrals. Seek New Markets British business groups have been asking the government for aid in capturing Germany's South Ameri- can markets which the blockade is expected to affect seriously. Such trade measures are sched- uled for discussion this week in the House of Commons which is to hear vmr reports from Mr. Cham- My. s lure qlwntlt of straw. psi-lain and wlngwn Qhuy-chlj], seven! hundred bushc of turnips. First Lord of the Admiralty. Parlia- I illllflm seed oats ‘several hun- mam. is to discuss also wnculcr to 6M bu» els mmsell. Ind lum- drcds of articles not enumcra‘ ". hold secret sessions’ during war- time. Special trains today carried ii,- 000 parents from London to the countryside where 5009000 children arc in refuges, as protection a- goinst air raids. ‘The parents HUG" F- Mon-also“ travelled ti. half-fare in ulc first 4"°"°"°"- of a series of such excursions. o- An authoritative announceanmtu _ 1,54, fliers at the cemetery fr... jot ARD colmuullv IA1\I said the navy had “enabled 21,000,- 000 ions of British shipping to keep to the seas with a loss of just four per cent of her total naval tonnage" in three months of war. Tanker Sinks This declaration followed dis- closure Saturday of a new loss to mines in waters around Britain, sinking of the lipid-ton British tanker San Calisto off the south- east coast. Two of her crew were killed, seven injured, and 35 land- ed unhurt. Balanced against this was the capture of two German vessels, the 2,185-tcn steamship Eilbek and the ZIS-ton trawler Sophie Busse. and the reported beaching of the 9,52l-ton German liner Watussi by her own crew. The crew of an unnamed Ad- miralty trawler reported sinking 0i’ a German submarine and possibly a sewnd off the east coast last lvcck. After sinking the first ‘U- boat, the crew said they attacked anctltcr with depth bombs and that oil patches indicated they had been successful. Bury Son Seek To Adopt, Lad Responsible can, 0.. Dec. a —(A.P) —A father and a mother buried their only son tcday—- and to take 1115 place sought. to adopt the YWm who ki.lle him. Obstacles stood in the way cf blend compassion Combs layed together all their years in th village of 300. I Scmeihinlg happened. Budfords shotgun discharged and Art Combs. uprawled in a road before him dead. Budford, freed temporarily from jail where he was held for investi- gation. joined the Combses today . I-Iis dart: eyes ro- year-old They had flected the grief of losing his friend. lThe Combses asked him to fill the ‘emptiness in their home. Budford wasn't certain what to do. His mother, Mrs. Pearl MoOLu-on, who bore Budford by a former hus- band. said “no I want Budfor ," The consent of both Mrs. McClur- en and the probate court is neces- sary for adoption. Auction At Margate llavl sold my farm l will sell by Auc on on the premises on Tuesday Dec. 5th beglninng at l2 p. m. my entire stock. crop and implunonts, conshtlug of 3 extra good work bones l driving horse (Bclinl Scott), 1i head of cattle. including several good milch cows. ii hogs. 30 hens, Implements 1 binder (Deer-m), l. hay mower M. ll., hay . e. M. ., 1 sectional seeder, l disc (John Deere) 2 acts smoothing narrows l cultivator. 1 gang plow, 1 walk ng plow, 1 row souffler, 1 horse hoe, 1 urs spreader, 1-2 Interest In Bog grader, 1-3 interest In Hall sprayer, l farm n, lbox ourhlsctbob slclghs, 1 cream aellerator, 12 tons Terms cash. If day is unfit sale on Wednes- day 0th, at some hour. WM. D. PROFITT. Soviet Press (Continued from page 1) influences hostile lo the U. s. s. R." Soviet offers during territorial negotiations with Finland prior to hostilities, the press asserted, would have protected the Finns. The neg- otiations broke down l0 days ago when Finland's reprcscntatxes re- fused to accede to Rrls ian demands. The newly-concluded mutual as- sistance pact, signed 1n lvioscuw by Otto Kuusillerl as head of the “democratic republic of Finland" set up in oynosition to the Hclsmg- Hers government granted RUSSlS. all the demands which hati been made during fruitless IIBEDUBIIOIIS. (Apparently Russia's irrogram for Finland‘ calls for creation of u friendly government, nominally in- dependent, and cesslon of some strategic territory without complete annexation by the Soviet union.) Gult Leader May ‘Evaporate’ Followers Say (By Roger Greene) (Associated Press Staff Writer) NEW YORK. Dec 3 —(AP) Harlem's little Father Divine brooded tonight over whether he just "evaporate for over‘ a law- suit that may expose the secrets of his wealthy religious cult. “Father is very. very disgusted," said one of his disciples. "He may just evaporate." Barring a carrying-out o.’ this threat to "steam off" the terrestial premises, the erstwhile Baltimore odd-jobs man who became the messiah of thousands , peace-shouting “angcls" will go on trial tomorrow in Stat/c Supreme Court in an equity action for $4.- 478 brouglht by one of his recant- ing followers. "I id all this money," said the oompmnant, Mrs. Verlnda Brown. a cook, “in the belief that unless I did so I was doomed to everlasting misery . . . . and that by giving the money to Father Divine, Iwas depositing it in his heavenly irrec- sury and was in that way assured of eternal life." Mrs. Brown, who said she was also acting for four or five other ex-"angels" with claims totalling about $22000. said her interest. in Divinc's “peace, ain't you glad?" movement began to curdle when the preacher became "too gTaslllfiil’ and demanded most of her hus- band's wages. She is seeking. in addition. a rc- 1119 WEEK at S. D. U. i The Rink Committee for the com- ing season was appzrlrnc: during the plki} week, and ls composed of the following : Ronald MacDonald (Chairman), Maurice Smith. Hu- bert Ol-Iunlcy, Francis MacAuley, Olesius McGuigan, Guy Sufillan, Unus S. Rossiter, Laonard Burke, and Ernest J. MoCarey. Basketball: The first section of UlC league “as completed at the be- glrlnirig of the week. Grails XII and XI tied for first place with six points each. The Seniors with four points, nosed out the Juniors by one point to gain second position. Occupylngythe cellar was the soph- olrnore — eshman team with one f e. Debates: In the resolution that the Honor System should be intro- duced into St. Dunstaxfs University, Noel Regan and F. P. Aylward won the judges decision over the nega- tive speakers, Hubert O'Hanley and John Horgan in the weekly debate of st. John's Society. A five-minute speech was delivered by Linus s. Roslter. The critic for the evening was Maurice Cahiil. In St. Augustine's Society, Carl Murphy, Gerald McQuaid, and John O’Ccnner, speakers for the negative side, defeated Aloysius MacLellan. John Larkin. and Raymond Rice in o, debate on the resolution, that the radio offers more to education than the The debate was criticized by o , Five minute speeches were delivered b(y David Gorman and Leo McDonal . St. Dunstank has again joined the City Hockey League. Rev. A. O. Murphy, coach of the Red and White team, has been appointed president of the League. Thomas Holland, Ediitor-inChief of “Red and Whltc". reports that all-departments of the College Ma%- azine are almost ready and will go o press next week. A notice announcing that the mid-year examinations will be held from Dec. l6 to 2lst (inciusivelyl l THE BAPTIST CHURCH Tile Junior Choir had charge u) lire music of the mnrningaren- daring a most efficient servici under the direction of John Inch, jMus, Bac, organist and choir- ‘master. The Rev, Harvey L. Danton, B, D., preach-ed d sermon particularly addressed to the younger of his congregation, taking as his subject the question “Just Living?" 1t ha; been said that some people make the world, the others just come alcng and llv-s in it. It is ours t0 choose whether we shall help to make a better world or just be satisfied to exist. "I always go with the wind," said the vagrant. You can be a world maker if you fill to the extent of your power the place where God has set you. Abraham was a world maker. the pioneer 0f faith who saw the vis- ion and accepted Lila cinllenge of its task. sail on" said Columbus, the man of determined courage in his task as a world maker. To win Africa, for Christ was the vision of Livingstone, truly a. world maker. Our Lord Jesus was the supreme world maker, follow Him who brought us the idcab and ins fr- ation toward the making of at better world, The evening service o ned with a fifteen mints peri of con- gregational slnglng led by Mr. McAuley. Mr. Danton delivered the sixth of the series on “Hymns We Love to Sing", basing his eloquent ser- mon on the thought which ani- mates Tennysons “Crossing the Bar." The choir gave a notable rendering of Prof. W. E. Fletcher's beautiful setting of Crossing the Bar. The Communion of the Lord's Supper was observed at the even- ing service. -§§'O-§-O-§ 0-0 O-QCO O-O-Q-Q f§+§-O%—§ AUCTION AT MARGATE ' Owing to a complete change is my business I will sell by auction on Tuesday, December 5th, beginning at 1 P. M. all my stock and Crop consisting in part of 3 extra. goucI work horses: one rlrivln" horse: l4 head of rattle; including several has been posted on the College bul- letin boards. and his followers from disposing of any of ls mvrald "extension i I-IcavcnsK-lncluding about 22 Man- ihattm properties and 50 rural “heavens? among them a rolling 500-acre estate at Krum Elbow, a- cross the Hudson River from Presi- dent Roosevelt's Hyde Park home. As Divine himself once ‘said: Iwe got aplenty, aplenty of wuild- | rigs." celvership tqlestrain Fnther Divine I 20nd milk cows; 5110915, 30 hens, Imlhflnflfl-S; one sci. Fairbanks Scales; two row potato scufflcr; 1mg farm team wagon; 1 box cart; one s" 50b Slokhs; I cream separator; l2 tons hay: large quantity of straw; several hundred bushel of turnips: i‘ ‘Illililflly of choice seed not; and hundreds of crficles not cnuma. fltfll- Terms czrh. W. D. PROFIT’! l HUGH F. MORRISON, Auiioneer. i +OH+COQOQ | L-23-12-2-4. RELIABLE ADVICE NOW before lar er "rowan that car y se ling FOX BREEDER BUYER SEE HIM — TALK WITH I-IIM TODAY! Now is the time to take advantage of present mark ‘uanilfles comc on the market. sell N NOW IS ‘II-IE TIME TO SELL YOUR PELTS FROM A WELL-KNOWN is to YOUR ADVANTAG BRING THEM IN QUICKLY FOR BEST PRICES ARMANI) HERSCOVICI BUYING DAILY AT u. s. cunt TAILOR suor Sumnlerside cf. prices. Dispose of your P0118 OW. The past few years have _ _.__\_ _ LKIA" .._uui.~a‘.'_._._ ~. ,