DPI"“".‘I‘Q'I“. i", w»? i" "Fl-IE GUARDIAN r CHARLOTTEI f. w LY lPAGE N INETEEN mule-N"?- Oiliiili {HAS »u-._r> 00013 - 0N DISPLAY J . ERNEST i it! Prince St. v\fl\:\>:_" amsvvrm DRUGGIST ‘Gill BZZIEJE inns urns OUR ASSORTMENT IS LARGE YARDLEYS—IN SETS - to $10.00 IYARDLEYS (Complete DIS- plny of all Yardlcys items). ASHES 0F ROSES SETS EVENING IN PARIS SETS WILLIAMS SETS ETC. Fancy Boxed CHOCOLATES CIGARETTES In Fancy Boxes TOBACCOS PASCALLS CANDIES CALL IN TODAY AND MAKE CHOICES H. WORTH Phone 82 EAItblkikirik!3D2313ID.B.JELBIQZIHiI-iiliiihhiaifiti-MPAEIBE 3F u practical gifto. i"i'-m\. D i Iran‘ | ~ l____ I ‘Electric DQIIOIMI‘ ' for the wlndlhiold. Guaranteed Baiterica Bull heavy duty lorvioe. \ Spotlight Chrome-plated inner control lighl i r‘/v//'4¢a ‘Lilli vnnuiis GALORE IN TIMI I FOR HOLIDAY GIFT BUYING A good practical gift for the family car will plooeo Dad or Mather. Ben i| n fine selection of email luxurlea in well "_ . Auto Hooter . Sturdiiy built. Easily Installed. Gee Oepe with leek. Chromium plated. Musical 9 Horne Complete with roll]. A ODMPLETE SELEDTIDII 0F TDP iIIIALITY TIRES F. R. McLAIIIE LTD. llii) GRAFTON ST. PHONE D00 EVERY Atlmission-‘fic UATURDAY NIGHT IS >¢v>¢-¢-v.-v-.-. I" t“ Mooooouc... SAVE Security . For 224 G eat Charlottetown r BATTERY PRIDES SLASIIE BIG REDUCTION ON GENUINE BATTERI FOR ALL FORD MODELS Any Size lottery ‘ 20% All lotteries Guaranteed "This Offer Good For Two Weeks Only" ¢uoeoow++&ee0e+o¢+o+e+++o+e+o+o4+o-e+0++++o+o+e CLOVER cum nnncr: SATURDAY Al Blanchard and the "Clover Club" Band Dancing 0:80 to 12.00 For reservations Phone 1222 Between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. Phone 478-]. ‘reservations held until 10:80 p.m. YOUR DANCE XIII l. THE CLOVER CLUB §OOO§§§6§§§§ SAVE winter . Driving STEWART MOTORS LTD. George “Street . Phone e31 §-O§O'%§@OODOQOOOOOOOGVOOOOAQOOOQOOOOO KCIIIBQ-I-I.I'I-IIIII-ITI.I The Morning g ls Nearlis Susan Glaspcll Perhaps that feeling - not being wanted. uouid leave her now, for now she was ivanted. Her father Viillltud hm- to came home or he ulould nut hzlic left things lls hc had. Of course she didn't under- Stflnd her being summoned hack any more thali she hnd under- Blond hcr being kept awayx There must bi. u reason. 51H" ll-ld fclt more than cvcr zilillic lifter Aunt Jcllifers death and thut ivzis why sire ilnd none ii» ihv rollllll’); to live \\'lIIl Hcilri. She hurl lhouuhl. ihcy were going to be married, but us they ivcrc about ready to leave Paris he said, in his light and cililrlrlinir ivny _ shc udmlrcrl his (‘H50 nbout every; ' . “loydlii (iilrling, I thought my cl nus going tilrough, hut Adv-l’ l.» lloldiili; it up. We won't lei. her ill-fraud us, will we?" He zifl2lill3fl to want her so mucil. and no one else unrated her; he was lonely loo. or mid so. and tllcil" thlilcs ncrc nil packed — not i-rcnuii: ciloilglz. perhaps, for ,';0< ing with him, But when he put it so lightly, so reasonably, she didn't want to make a fuss; and shc did ivant to be with him. Life “Us KZIYOI‘ \\’Ilf‘li she was with Ilenrl. uiid wllrlt difference did it make to anyone also hoir she lived? Six month with Henri and then one day he said, lightly as he said everything else; "You're an awful fraud, aren't you, Lydill?" She was startled. nncl then nt Once this seemed part of all she did not know about herself. "I do not think I am a fraud." she said. "You cheat. don't you, Lydia?" “Oh, no! she cried. “Oh. yes! You belle your looks. Now is that fair?" Laughing s little at her be- wilderment. "Look st you. Hidden fires, you say to a men's blood Secrets. A gift. Well, darling, where are the hidden fires?" "You think - something l: wrong wth me?" “That's it . something ie wrong with you. You ere too pure. You are cold - though I don't think you are really cold. But guarded - withdrawn. And you look as if underneath the reserve there wnit- ed . waited to flame and leap -" his voice was less light, was almost harsh. "You don't even know what I'm talking about. d4 you?" She was stunned. She hadn't known she seemed sfrnid with Henri. She had felt lighter with him - almost merry. She liked their gay meals and the trips they took and all ‘his fooling. It had seemed to release her from some- thing. In these months she had thought less about the things that troubled her. But it seemed they had been there, just the ssme. She had thought she loved him - though gnyly. end it had been good to be gay. Henri “as tired nf her; it wasn't his fault. he couldn't help it if he was tired or her. So one dny she said. "I think I will go to Greece." She had thought o! Greece only es she said it.‘ She must get away again. Farther away. "Little Lydia is going in for the classics." he said. so she had been e good deal in that part of the world - Greece. Egypt. 'l‘lirkey. Arnbin, sometimes with English or Germans or French -'nrcileologists. people there on business or traveling for pleasure. One year she had a little house near Smynrn. She liked it there, it seemed another life; she liked the donkeys and tho goats. liked the peasants and the fig tree in her yard, the almond tree and the olive grove behind. ‘ in Smyrna he joined some people who were sailing among tile Greek islands. She stayed for n. time on the island of Andra-l, and there took Knuln, After she had Kouln, and must consider 12'! Grafton Street Charlottetown. P. I. l. Bu: No. i3! we have n quantity of IIIM C.]y|||¢n(g, Furnnccttee In WW9" ‘condition: euitnhle for roll "I wood. Going at a reel bargain- 81950 Each Maurice Block 8i 0o. lit! Kent Street Hunters’ Corner ' (Continued from Page l8) Dartmeilt to Port Joli to obtain n first hand count of the approxim- ate number of geese wintering there. The time was mid winter and the goisc season had been long since closed in areas outside the Sanctuary. Ho was nccrinpan- led by a friend who was familiar with tho district and the llflFTOW twisting trails tliat~ llittrwove through the ‘Goose Hills‘. He had made his count. which was in the thousands and ivas on ills way out as he didn't wilnt iilgilt i0 overtake him and his friend ill this lonely winter wild-. erness. The road was narrow midi hilly iii certain Sifllijs \\’Ili'l‘(i the‘ trees i-hinnr-(l Lute-k from thi- trnili was it possible for two cars to pass! They were a few miles from thei goose grounds iv-‘len suddenly} around a bond in the evcrgl-ccni encompassed track they almost bumped fcnders with a big limous- ine. l My friend immediately sensed poaching iruublc...for what other reason Wfllllti a var load cf hunters bc heading for the gfltist» KfOlJhCIs s; Life ill the RIlPPlt-Oll. 'l"lie Limousine hold tilree Ilalifnx giin~ ners equipped In the Latest of out- door hunting clothes. With them was a local Guide who bore- a rather bad reputation in respect tn his regard for closed . alsolls. lll response to IllS query; "What are you hunting?" The answer was "Rnllibils". A search oif the car dis~ closed no game of any kin-d either furrecl or feathered llut.. .my friend did find a casi- 4500 iiiiiiiiisi of Impr-rinl 2's along with lhi- ini- cst in halrrlltrlcss 1.2 gauge shot- guns Asked why they drove over 200 miles to this foresaken spot. pass- ing better raibblt grounds on the way. one of the hunters sllnply shrugged: "We like the from air" was his mmcommlttnl reply. Earfetched as the explanation was there wasn't much could be done about it. The only inconvenience the party of hunters suffered was to back their limousine n half mile fill they reached a. spot where the game chil- could pass. ‘Phat’: the way it is in this province. To find out what's going on in the great outdoors one has to get out on the prowl at all times and in out of the way places and flrld out for oneself. Lest Sun- dny afternoon I we: doing lome scouting across the Hllldoorio river Itwuapeocil ofodaycelm and sunshiny. At about 10 minutes to four I turned the car at Gaullr. Rood e. short distance east of O'- Kcefeka bake. The snolw covered trail stretching southward through the winter woods beckoned to me and I yielded to the tamptation for l. stroll. I had walked maybe a quarter mile when I hard the calling of wildgeeoe. I knew the birds were on the ground as their calling held an alarmed note like the way geese will call when slammed at the approach of someone and about to take flight. I fisurcd “WY were about e mile off to the sou’ East 1t an angle to my right. It was hard to place the location with any certainty as the interven- ing distanci- ivas covered with n heavy stand of spruce. I got the location better n mom- ent later when the hollow BOOM of n shotgun sounded on the clear frosty air and the calling of the geese rose in ll sir-ady crcsendo o! wild musicmuthcy were on the wing. Seconds ‘later, about the time it would take for n gunner to fumble in his pocket for mother Shell. came e second rqaort. I could trace the course- of the 8%" Norbestw-ard- by their culling. I could tell it was n big flock by the volume of honking. The crying o! the geese became fninier ltnd by the time I reached tile cm" 1t ‘had died-out. The old Chev got such R. sur- prise ivhen I gave her the gas silo thought for n minute she was a bringing up o child, she thought anew of herself as n child, and it made acute nil the old homesick- ness. She terribly wanted to be - not so fair away. So shc jniilrdl the Prestons. nrchcnlogists who‘ were going tn Yucatan. It was the‘ closest she could com!‘ in Ruin; home. At least the ocean would‘ not be IIPIWPPII. ' To be continued il ,| . l G. F. Hutcheson i l lrSan l i l i I i | I OPTOMETRISTS i I ‘Opeelaliete lu the fitting ol glnuee for the correction ol ocular defocto." til onnrron vrlu-zm l Ford. Opposite O'Keefe’s Lake I met a chap with n. horse and nag- on. I fired the questions at him: “Did you see the geese?” "No" "Did you hear the geese?" "No" "Dld you hear the shots?" "No" "\t"liere'd you come from?" "Hermitage Station". I remembered seeing his nag tied near the Blot- ion about 20 minutes earlier. I figured the flock of geese, that tvcre raising enough noise to wnkc the dead, had crossed the Pisquid Road roughly between the Reid properly and the old Murphy place. A quick calculation placed the driver 0f the horse in ihc vicinity of Curralis Corner when the gees€ crossed the road. If the young mun didn't hear the geese his thoughts must have been miles away. May- b0 he was thinking of the girl he was with the night before or thc on: ‘he was going to see the coin- ilig rliglll. I liarl no better Illilk Ilwlliill IIli‘ Hermitage Station urea. I talked in 5 different farmers. lllPlII who I later learned, whose farms were almost in the pzlili of ilie ge e, but none of them would admit seeing or hearing geese. I must have had a mean look in my cyc. It was not until tae next moril log ‘I found that the flock of gcese, 7O of ihcin l»; nctu-al cluurxt. had ilikcli the i‘!)lll'.\‘r~ I had figur- cd they would. Inforrilaiicn can be surprisingly hard to pICX up some times. Once I was sure of the line of flig/ht it was just n matter of time till I located the- field they were fer-ding in. l checked it on Thursday nfterncon. Ii wns an oui-of-the-way woods surrounded field wherein n stack of grain stood that hard its lop blown off. Some of the sheaves that dotted the field had been picked to pieces by the hungry goose. I also learned that iwo shots had been fired at this same field on the previous afternoon (Wed~ nesday) and two flocks of geese. with 1b or 40 birds in each. were seen flying in a southerly direct- ion away from the feeding ground. The gunner on Sunday had broken two lama The one under the Provincial Game Act which prohibits shooting On Sunday and the Federal Migratory Birds Act that protects waterfowl in close season. The question is: Why should anyone wish to shield a double law breaker? Our wildlife belongs to all. It stands in need cf protection and unless the gen- eral public co-operate more closely with enforcement officers the handwriting is 0n the ivall in respect to our Beeoe and ducks. Nem- were truer words slmktrli "As n men soweth so shall "he also reap.” We had a 800d crop of 30850 and ducks this past season but wiimt guarantee is there that we'll have i/he same good sport in 1960. Remeirrlber...the northern hatch of ducks saved the day this past season in respect to this province. It also filled in for the sister prov- ince of Nova. Sarina. and New Bnlns-lvlck. A check of game bags In these two provinces last full by game officials showed that sp- proximetely 0 out of 10 ducks cx< nmlned were Ybung (‘If fhé YB"- Thnt gives cause for deep thought. If that ratio is ever changed the other way around-where are we at? Back Stretch (Continued from Pafifi 19> ert Morris. Joe delnled nil Cam- Qfgfffi Statements. stating that he had driven his race in proper nulrl- ner and that he was not respon- slble for Cameron's horse making R. break. A: the snares Md not seen mylhlng untoward in the conduct of Driver O'Brien the bl!- peal of Octave Blake was dismiss- ed and the Judges decision upheld. The 40-day race meet at Holly- wood ‘Par’; Cal. was concluded on Saturday. Dec. 3rd. In conversat- ion with the manager. Bwwlfl Kearney who is n. Director 0f the 115111;“ he said he was milch pleased and that it could be con- sidered n success financially and in every other way. The 13789“ M'- ienclance was on the closirlti meet w-limi 151.236 people paid admission. The rncilug WM 800d and i" 5mm‘ classes the competition was so keen that only photo finishes could separate the leading horses. Even!- ihing passed off well and the horsemen who raced UIBIB all 501' .. glmfl slice of money and WP"? huippy/ with the nrrnngellnelits made for their comfort and con- veniencc. 'l'hc top driver was Clint Hcdgills. a Canadian. who drove 24 winners, and the top frolicr of the meetifi ivas DIIIVIJRI‘ Iinstwicks Chris spcnccr that won the @000 Golden West Trot and set i151 n new track record of 2.33 4-5 for ilhfififlfi and one-quanti- mile. He also won from the ume field llt s mile and . iting upll new track mark of 2.0T i-S. The frotter ERR" ilauoizcr nddcd- another world mark to his iirfinil when h‘? ‘will n mile and one eighth in 2.15 4-5 l in winning the Preview Trot. Dem: SIIDRTIIDRN ASSDDIATIDII Annual meeting at City Building Sat- urday at 8 P. M. All b readers of grade and purebred cattle are invited to attend, to dis- cuss general problems expenditure of ‘I949 1950. R. R. BELL, K.C. President of the breed and the grant and plans fer S. WOOD Secretary AIINDIIIIDEMEIIT T0 MILK DDNSIIMERS Starting December T8, all pasteurizing plants with the exception of Pure Milk Company will cease Sunday deliveries until further notice. The Pure _Milk Company will stop Sunday deliveries December 25. PURE MILK COMPANY LTD. SUNSHINE ISLAND DAIRY G. 8r G. PURE MILK DAIRY v HEALTH PASTEURIZED MILK COMPANY PURITY DAIRY LTD. BRIGHTON DAIRY In future. drivers of these plants will 5e responsible for mifi bottles which will be charged or refunded at 5c per bottle. on Hanover that finished third be- hind Egan Hanover in that record- breaklrlg rwe came back n. few days later to set a new track rec- ord for the mile when he trotted in 2.01 i-.'i and a fcw (lays later vriLh Til Shivcly holding the YMIlS Demon Hanover sped w the front at vhe start and held it to the finish in the mile and one-quarter feature trot stepped in 2.33 1-6. Back a length was Dutch Harbor cobib Farm in Otiin. Jerry let a new track record of 2.31 in Mn- ning the mile and cneqllsrter N0.- 000 Golden West Pace. and set hill first world record in en overnight free for all pace when he went. n. mile and one-sixteenth in 207 3-5. He followed that with a new world markoifafltityfilrlamlleandorlc- half feature. Hie final wirl was the 560.000 Invitation meet on the int day of the racm. He won the one and one-eighth miles in 2A8 3-5. but made good use of those he drove. The three year old Good Time paced the fastest ndic for e three year old in Western United States ill tvilming the $10,000 Western Pace in 1.69 9,5. Honors for the best aged horse went to Jerry The First, the young pacing stallion owned by Eddie Oohib end Jen-y _ Burdick. T‘ra.ined end driven in alil driven by Joe O'Brien. Joe was his racea by Cobb, Jerry set n third leading driver at the meei- new world's record 5nd g n"; ing. He had no outstanding horses track mark before leaving for the Dr. Stanton was second and Ind- ian Land bill-rd. POULTRY PRICES Effective immediately we are pleased to pay the following prices delivered Charlottetown. Grade Grade Grade TURKEYS A I C Upto l8lbs............. 48 45 30 Over T8 lbs. . 35 32 21 GEESE AIIWeiqhts 44 42 25 DUCKS All Weights 44 42 25 CHICKEN lsnpiilcrhllrea will‘? Special Grade I Grade n 01mm c Over 5 lbs. . . . . 44 42 35 23 4V2 to 5 lbs. . . . 41 40 32 2i FOWL Over 5 lbs. . . . 33 30 28 20 4V2 to 5 lbs. . . 30 27 25 ‘I8 DANADA PACKERS LIMITED Charlottetown Prince Edwar? Island MAKE IT THREE It-is a proven fact that the farmer who treats his pasture with fertilizer wlll increase the productivity of his cattle. Your pasture land is a major crop. The wise farmer treats it as such. Hc knows that his pasture is deficient. This loss effects his dairy product output. He profits when he applies Aibntroe Granular. Fertilizer to his grasslands. A fertilizer chemical- ly produced to restore his feed. leek granule eentoino Free-flowing, daetleu all the vital clenente Alhetree Granular your farmland needs. Fertiliser will rwi. lump cr 63"". f is clean and euy to handle and elerel without deteriora- tlen er lel of weight. It lnlarce uni- form distribution when applied . . . en‘ important factor fer an even stand. n good yield and o better crop. This ycer invest In Albeired lie duetleee. pereae nature and ite bel- enccd content of Nitrogen. Phoepherie Acid llltl Potaeh Iuha it the ideal plant teed. For inereeeed fertility of eoll and more ebundont crepe lee tine- looted Albatree Granular Iortiileeh- It pdy‘) ‘J FERTILIZER j ALBATROS THE DIST‘ INA IITTIR FORM r >t—!. v ii . .-...;'-:;