u-srltnv 5N,i,,,-;V— .|_-.- a.wv..¢-r.us+¢»w».s\r.». ze-nus-xawuaseazusiyiahuanavow-rr" v _ 41.... ..._.-nun. .-<.<.-».-w,,».-<-Q-aV-sne¢.¢y-Q-Q . > .._--.-—— » — p t_I@‘-,‘,\4 WM .. "' g1 , mo. mo. Professional Bards 114.1201) e- BENTLEY ,;-l_ .1. a. BENTLEY 3:“ W. E. BENTLEY, K. c. Elm-vista: and Attorney-at-Lsw w»: MONEY To LOAN ‘CEDflloe: 1B0 Richmond Street iORMAN W. LOWTHER Iflarristelr 8r Attorney At Law :3 so Great George Street "'" Charlottetown, P. E. I. MONEY TO LOAN ,.. : Elex. W. Matheson YISRRISTEB, SOLICITOR, ETC. Zfltmey to Loan Collections I Office: 140 Richmond Street. fihabition 61111111881011 3 f} Chas. H. Black, Chairmen. 1' “' Chsrlottetoyn. he, B. McDonald, West St. Peters. John Simpson, Hamilton. g all information regarding _ olll of PIOHIBITION ACT ‘ J. t» begin LAV TO N. D. MacLean UNDERTAKER E MBALMER l Charlottetown and North Wiltshirs I Phone 149 ' NEW YORK THIS EVERYDAY LUXURY The luxury ole complexic leept lovely by Yardley Lavender Toiletries can be yours, even though you spend but little on cosmetics. The daily use oi Yardley Toiletries, luxury that it is, costs so Soap that long outlast: ordinary All-Purpose, snow-white cream, a mist-line powder, and a lragran w so conect lor every occasion-these lov- able items will win your heart when you their daily use. ENDER 0 ‘PARIS 140 ‘Egg Laying Contest Riepoit of the Prince Edward Is- land egg laying ccntmt for the weak ending October 23, 1934. ‘llair oi Eyeglasses When you need them is cna_ of the beet investments you could make. Mamy who procured satie- fsctory Glasses from us will back up this statement. E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR opmmsL-ilsum f ~ m. nemmnr, Sid. No. Owner's Name Pts. ‘ Pen 1 9 William 881130111 3434.5 2 '1 Mrs. J. D. McFa-rlane . 2417.5 3 8 limp. . 4 2 Mrs. 2821.6 5 6 '1 B 9 ii 10 11 12 .. . Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “M8165 The Barred Rock pen No. 9 of Mr. William Bansom, of Durham Bridge. N,B.. wins the contest, with 2280 eggs, 2434.5 points; Mrs. J. D. MacFarlane, DoSable, RE. Island. has the second pen, No. 7, also Barred Rocks. which had 2064 eggs. 2417.8 points, Mrs. J. 1". Beaten. New Clearance Auction Sale . ' of high class Ayrshire Cattle at MONDAY, AT l UCLOCK OCTOBER N, 1984 Our Senior herd sires Netherton Ambition Inns, A. A. and Springburn Dtnlhmlto. Also 4 young bulls by our senior herd sire and out of-it. 0. 1’. cows. Eight B. 0. P. cows with exceptionally good records ranging from 10 lo 14 thousand Ins" mostly all due to freshen this fall. Two two-year-old Heifers bred. ' -~- Two-yesr-oid Heifers bred. Two Oslves. Wjrwotlowsnotbredwillbesoldforbeeifcrceab. All animals will be sold without pedigrees, but pedigrees can be arranged roi- if desired. Six months approved joint notes bear-‘mg 4% interest will be accepted. Sole poeltivs. No reserve. I. A. MacDONALD, Auctioneer. INGS é SON 11-1466-10-2446-27. , , norici-z ro Hsnrnuizn 'A Meeting of Prince Edward Island Fishermen will be held in the Board Room, City Building, at Charlottetown on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30th, at 1.30 P. M. for the purpose of organizing a Provincial Fishermenhi Organization, All fishermen and others directly interested in Fisherman's Co-opcrative Enterprise are urgently requested to attend. By request of FORMER P. E. I. DIRECTORS, UNITED MARITIME FISHERMEN. i L-1S10-l0-26-29 Theory. If L [my Kgnfla", L.R.A.M., A.A.G.0. (Licentiate Teacher of Pianoforte, Royal Academy of Music, London, Eng.) Receives pupils for tuition in Piano, Singing and Advanced and Elementary courses given. Group Teuchingfor beginners. Terms Moderate ' Studio: I-Ieartz Memorial Hall ’ Phones 960 or 1024-1. L-Slti-lti-mwf-tf i 11.x. s. IIEIIIIIIIG, B-A-.<I~P.A..C.G.A crane-mu runuo ~OAIAIIIAN scorn! or oosr aooomrrarrrs Iufllillsmrll Ion ralnm arrmavm m rue scrum: ooulr or r. e. 1. r. e. I. euelseruarrve rm cashmere cumu- Imrs recs-r or wove scone Ion-onto mansion-unlit. r.‘ s. l. ACCOUNTANT OI’ Wiltsbire, 9.3.1., has the third pan, No. 2, White Leghorns, which had i092 eggs, 2321.6 points. The White Leghorn pen No. 1 o! Mrs. Roland Easter, New Wiltshlre, is fourth, with 105B eggs. 2293.3 points; m. William Sansonfs 13.8. hau No. '7 leads the contest for indiv- idual production with 265 eggs, 302.7 points; Mrs. Roland master's White Leghorn hen No. 0 is sec- ond wlth 258 eggs, 302.5 points; and Mrs. J. D. Maclvarlaneh BR. hens Nos. 1 and B are third and fourth with 250 6885, 2N5 points and 24'! eggs. 287.7 points respectively. Government owned pens a-re en- tered in the contest for registra- tlon only. and were not placed in this report. NUDE! In the 16th annual Prince lid- ward Island m1; Laying Contest which was completed October 28, 1964, there werelto hens entered in 12 pens of 18 birda each. Of this number: 125 completed the contest; l1 were withdrawn; 20 died; 66 hens laid over 200 eggs: 62 qualified for registration: a were disqualified for small egg si ae. The 125 birds completing the contest year of 51 weeks averaged 199 eggs eaclL. The lollovrillg birds laid aoo or more eggs which avenged 24 oe. in the dozen after the first four weeks of M91118. and are eligible for regis- tration by the Canadian National Poultry Records Association. Pen 1 Hens Nos. P. 12, 18, 18, 19, 20. Pen. I Hens Nos. P. 21, I. 38. M, 2'1. M, 20, soc, 30B. Pen 3 Hens Nos. P. 5-1. 32, S3, 34, 8'7. Pen 4 Hens Nos. P. 45. Pen 5 Hens Nos. P. 61, 6'1, ‘l0. Pen ‘l Hens Nos. P. '11, ‘l4, ‘N, ‘l8. ‘l9. 80. Pen ll Hens Nos. P. 01, B2, 54, U. B7, 90. Pen ii Hens Nos. P. 92, 93, 94, 96. D7. 99. 100. 326. 3T1. Pen 10 Hens Nos. P. 101, 100, 104, 105. 110. Pen l1 Hens N00. P. 115, 114, il'1, 4118, 120. ‘ Pen i2 Hens Nos. P. 121, 123, 121. ;128. 129. ‘Fl. U. 95. 1T0 Operate On 125 Pound Tumor I DALLAS, Texas. Oct. zs-(aro q-Tha talk of preparing a still-pound ‘Dallas woman for an operation w lremove from har abdomen a 125- pound tumor. one of the largest known to medical science, began at s hospital here today. "The tumor must be reduced be- ‘ hospital said. "Otherwise the alwck attendant to its removal might be too severe for the patient." The surgeon who will perform the operstion began to prince the tumors aim during the morning. lStray Shot Injures Boy (0. I. Iy Oflllilfle lpeeisl IRZIBIWAi, R- l. Oat. EEZEEE iikiiiii . g: ii 1.. Hovsrstwrz-"E l and A HER ACTIVITIES ._Z-¢ -< T ..._. , (Continued) "Actqulck and careful," mamma hlnurrsu you; be was here twice today, and now he's out looking for you." Dairy removed her arms from about her another who wanted her to act "carotid and quick" so that aha could marry Hoberg now, sl- though last night, av if she hed she could not have. killed-that is, Hobcrg behaved that Kat had killed end for her. She thoulht of the people on the elevated poring over her picture. although they gazed at herself in only the usual way‘. Hut if they had recognised her, whet s thrill she would have given them! Such s thrill she had been sup- DMHI in How's today! The glam- our of the crime committed, sup- posedly for her. had made her dif- ferent and more desirable to Ho- barg; because Adele had been killed, Joan Dairy Boyle hed ceased to be merely a good-looking girl who worked in his office and had be- come capable of exciting him to a new sensation; and she might capitalize that sensation to maneu- rsrsd him into marriage, momma 1 Daisy walked away and mechan- icounscled. “and you can marry ' lically set to making mammah bed, ' ’ while trying not to think with dis- gust of momma. "Where's Dads?" she asked, to change the subject. when mamma followed her into the bedroom. “He's with Mr. Hoberg, trying to find you." And, thought Daisy miserably. undoubtedly Dads was borrowing money from Hoberg. Dads would miss no such chance as the gods had given him today. But ever would he expect her to redoe his debt: nor, for all of Hobergs mon- ey, would Dads tell her to marry. No; Dads disgraced himself and her only in other ways. Marnma undressed and flopped down upon the bed. "Rub my back now? Daisy," she bid. “Rub my back good. I've had s terrible hard day . . . That's a right nlca looking man in the pic- tura with you- Assistant State's At- torney Clarke, the paper calls him. M)‘. Hobcrg went to see him and told him what's what . . . Tell me about him, Daisy; and rub deeper- deeper right there. That's good. Now tell me about that nice looking lew- ysr Clarke." CHAPTER. XXVI. A SONS LETTER "He's not nice looking," Daisy da- nied, with s sudden vengefulness, which surprised herself. "He's mis- tor-God looking! He thinks he's mister God!" she cried out. “He's one of those essential cltlcens. marnenc; he's one that packs the country on his back and the rest of us are dirt." While Joan Daisy was thus mak- ing outcry to mamma against Cal- vin Clarke. he was engaged in like manner with denunciation of her to his mother. For he had returned to his rooms and was eiona end, since it was Sunday evening, it was time for his regular letter- Befoze beginning to write, he al- ways imagined, according to the season, where his mother would be and whet she would ba doing when aha should receive his latter on Tuesday ramming. ‘lists Mter, he though, would be delivered to her in the gate gar- den-the old, perennial garden by the white picket fence in front of the house, where the me-rigold end late ohrysenthemum would be in bloom in the warm, October sun- light and where cosmos dotted deli- cate tints along the gardens edge. "The gate garden." Calvin rc- peated to himself aloud for the pleasure and pride of the words; for this designation of the garden was more than two hundred years old. having been written in a diary 0f the date of 1722, proving that the Olarkes had had a garden on that spot when a stockada followed the later line of the picket fence and that the original log gate had swung over the arc of the light, lat- ticed barrier of today. Calvin imagined his mother with garden shears in hand clipping the stems cf cosmos and merigold for the tabla and glancing down the lens for old Sentry, the postman, who would hand her the letter ovar the pickets and stand and char; for a minute _or so. . His mother would go on cutting her flowers until she had forty blossoms, which aha would arrange in vases in the cool. quiet north room overlooking the Merrimec, where she would sat herself on the hooded bench beside the fireplace for sn undisturbed reading of his letter. She wee tell end 111°“ well reached you before this. Herc, even before he shot his wife, every one knew him. He was e hero, being a 1am band leader. . . . "Ho u a boy. bmlv twenty-Io“! years old, born of In unmarried mother who was a menicurist in a barber-shop. Ketlar wss her name, of nationality indeterminate as yet, 1 have not personally seen har. The father. of course, is 0011191661! , blsmatlcal. - "Ketlara reward for ridding himself of his wife was to have been the Boyle girl, who mlquestionably was associated with him in tho chiiiélnemdwhonowistryingtofrec "She lives, or lived, immediately above Ketlar, in an exact dublicsta of his own flat. having moved into the building for the purpose of being near him when he had da- serted his wife. The place ts her home, where her mother sleeps of varonal and her father liquw. U. S. Aircraft Ca r ri e rs Side Swipe In Lock _.__,_ (A. P. Hy Guardian's Special Wire) GRISTOBAL, C. 2., Oct. I4-Tha huge aircraft can-tars Lexington and Saratoga sidaswiped and smashed lamp-posts during lockagc today and tied up part of the United States fleetbehirid them in Gatun Lock during the transit to the Pacific. 1t was reliably learned the mar- ina division of the Canal Zone sn- ticipates inability to keep the schedule of the ships’ movement, which was set for completion at noon tomorrow. At six urn. today the fleet was 30 minutes lstc be- cause ‘ rmitiont heavy rains rs- tarded the operations. rt was unofficially said the offi- cers in charge of the canal transit had hoped to clear all as ships in less than 40 horn-s. In a test last April 110 ships were cleared in 4'! hoursfromthaPecifletotheAt- lantie. - Business Conditions Improved in Canada The marked betterment in Can- adian nomic conditions during as first eight months of 1094 compared with the comparable figures for the some period of the preceding year. arc m excellent measure of the pro- grcasmadcsincathalowpoint of the depression was reached in the early months of 1085. The fndax o! tha physical volume of business averaged 96.6 in the first eight months cf 1984, e. gain of 23.0 p. c. over 75.7, the standing intha sema period of last year. The busi- namtndexiabssedonfilsotorerc- lsting to the trend in minaret pro- duction, manufacturing, construc- tion, electric powar and distribution. The factors are individually sdlust- ed for‘ seasonal tendencies end ex- pressed es e percentage of the monthly average for the bass year of ma. ‘ma markedly higher level of this index during the present year indicates the extent of the acceler- ation in busineu and productive operations. ‘lihe lndexolthacostofliving ad- venccd from 11.9 to 78.8, showing t-ha very modest gain of 1.1 p. c. The gains were mostly recorded in food and clothing, as fuel, rent and sun- dries reached slightly lower levels. ‘The index of common stock prices averaged 50.0 in the first eight months of 1034. This compares with 64.6, the low level during the same period of lest year. The gain in this comparison was consequently 33.1 p. c. Mining stock prices averaged 40.! p. c. higher, the index being 129.4 compared with 86.7. Bond prices computed from yields on Ontario government bonds resch- ad ‘an extremely high level in ‘Aug- ust, the index averaging 113.5 in the first eight months of the year. 111a gain over 101.8, the average for the same period of the preceding year, was 11.0 p. 0.. a marked increase in e factor not normally subject to wide and strong, his mother. with whitening heir, simply arranged and ‘clear. fluctuation. Egg?! T I “first a ICI-SHTCI] and deliberate gem: was Croquet. yet how at’ evactive our grandpar- entr found r e green lawns, the painted lwo r, the iuil stn‘ ed ma! strand ulr. Oi er and more strenuous amss have replaced it. t how suited it was so the sports clorlm of the rimesl " reality first" urea the gzicy adopted when the first of Surprise Soap was made in St. Stephen, . ., 49 years ago. This It: lrea never In"; Y's-d lit improved with knowledge, leaping pace wit modern requirements. CLARKE STEAMSHIP 00., LTD. s "E =1 ‘i 2% it is s;- Northland Oct. l2 Oct. 15 Oct. 15 Gsmesia 0 Ncrthlsnd Oct. 86 Oct. l0 Oct. 20 Gaapcsh Oat. s1 Nov. s 9 Nov. 12 Nov. 12 Gsepesis Nov. 14 Nov. 20 Northlsnd Nov. 23 Nov. 28 Nov. 26 CARVELL BROS LTD. Charlottetown Aecnh A Few Questions Everyone should know the answers to thcaa questions- Are my ayae really efficient? Arc they normal or near it? Arc they strained? What error orerrorsofvislonhaveifilo 1 overwork my eyes? Do l give than: the care their import- suca demands? should I have them examined and receive the aid they may be found to need. G. F. IIIITBIIESOII OPTO@TIJST '~ ,. €€h 4:1’ , I 'a\ R ‘ , \\.\\ " '1? (5 b 1, Sports Clothes of the Eighties were so different from ours . . . Yet they, too, were washed with SURPRISE SOAP ° Clothes in the Eighties were mostly hand-made and“ could only be replaced after many hours of painstaking sewing. Even then they were washed with Surprise Soap and the results proved what . housewives of today also know, that the outstand- ing quality of Surprise is its safety. ° Surprise Soap always does e thorough washing. The rich, penetrating lather foams up easily and quickly. yet the gentle suds are so pure and mild that the most delicate garment cannot possibly come to any harm. ° Dainty iabrice and exquisite colours are always safe with Surprise Soap because it washes so quickly and with so little rubbing. And this helps clothes to last longer, too, for this easy washing keeps them shapely and unfadcd. CITY TICKET OFFICE . u Grout George some > oananun rwnoxir. uamwars . can/mun uanomar. minimums , dcketeenmicevlfllsilwsyslsd0ccqsltasnrehlp Wecifaeycenyeriedviaslnseiacflenoftrsveircutcs makayoIsta-teenamsuddeqhgcersumvflsuqgivasa- l aietaucewidspa-posiemrdeiveycusgmesulilsst ‘ Isooslticketasieosddtoslpchte. W. K. ROGERS , (ltyflckctAgdst lhauaelttandstl- 1 ‘AA A 1mm‘; —r--_._. Fardy Bus Service & Taxi Service GIIAIILOTTETOWII to FORTUNE Headquarters in Ohsrlottatawn — DIANA TIA ROOMS. Headquarters in Souris-LINNOX HOTEL any BUS SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY (mm ill-Mills rm: LBIAVIS! "l" 1.1a a. u. Charlottetown . 4.1a r. M- s.10A.tf.illt.5tewsrt.. .I.O0P.M- l.l5A.tl.lloreli... Jar-ll ueeli l.l5A.lil.St.1'etsr' Jar-M tewsrt IMAM-Sauna... AMP-l Cheri .lOMA.ll.ArrivaelIm .usr.it Huewiiletapau stenypeisttmreste. ‘Haedasarterein Old Spsinhslcsuis. Commencing Monday, October 21nd, Blue Bus will opereia three deye a week: Monday, Wednesday M"! Saturday, running on the same schedule. m Ssh n. From PETERS vie rouia to STURGEON . . .. 81.75 81-00 LOWER a. vrrnn monraovn 1.50 9: New PERTH 1.20 go SOMERVILLE 1.10 i“ ALBEBRY PLAINS 1.00 m venues RIVER so u“ MILLVIEW .15 ~35 cnsnav VALLEY .. .00 g, Pp .41. M -- This olar remains in eifact. for one month. TIME TABLE heaving Charlottetown .. 4.00 p. m. Leaving Fortune 8.15 a. m. " uelbrock 4.20 p. m. “ DlngwsiPs . 8.25 s. m- “ Kaefdelnks 4.85pm. " Dundee " 4.45 p.m. " Hri , " e-rdigsn . 5. " 0 ....... 8.05 s. m- “ " “Station ...... 9.20am- " " Keefe‘: inks 9.80 a. III- " " Hualbrook ..... 8.45 s. m- Arrlva Fortune p. m. Arrive Chsrlottctowm. 10.05 e. m- i . I tersnu.eu..-..-..nnisuuiiurnus...