ufl-‘ltk- . . m mfikiidlffiiiflbtlt‘!!! ‘fliiki-‘L;X‘" Vie?‘ J PAGE TWO C '1 Women said: ..!. $23 W)‘ NJ 41‘ 7 EIV1¢Y~ Soaps ‘that save you work are hard on hands BUT Iliad was before they knew hon kind the New Oxgdol is to hands and dainty things! 0 Richer, thicker, longer-lasting suds -50% more euds-thafs the reason this amazing soap can do so much and still be kind to hands and dainty things. Rinses clean, softens water, never balls up. Splendid for 118E111 washing machines. Th: Procter R Gamble Compll] of Canada, Ltd. AUCTION SALE At Suniiiicrsiile, P. E. 1.. on lVed- ncsday, Oct. 26, at 2 o'clock. The desirable property, consisting of u two apartment house, No. 23 and B5 PopktrAve. (off Central Street) with all modern conveniences and hardwood floors, garage and stable; with about two acres of land adjoining: nil fronting streets. Suitable for building lots, poultry or farming. S ROBERTSON T. ‘l ‘fl-Ill, Auctioner. 5938-10-20-21-22-25 ' AUCTION SALE 0f pure bred Jersey Cattle at Stephen liolroyd, Wlnsioe Road, t; mile from lyinsioo Station ivnnxizsmr, OCTOBER 26th AT 2 0'(.‘LO('l{ SHARP 1 pure bred Jersey Bull z years old-choice animal. 7 (‘oivs in calf. 1 fat Cow. 1 two your old llcifcr. 4 Heifers one year old. 1 Calf four months old. 1 Drait. Colt 1'5; years old, 1 Foal four months old. Terms at sale. ALEX MeRAE, Auctioneer. 583l-lfl-lfi-smivf-5l, v >QOO&>¢‘Q\'Q-OQO§QQ-Q-Q-Q-}QQ EYES TESTED GLASSESNDFITTED J. S. TIiTLOR E. W. '1'» i I m: Optometrists 142 Richmond street .+o+o+o+» _ 00000049000009 ~ Professional Cards _____________ Stewart d’. Lowther J. D. STEWART. K. C. N. W. LOlyTliER BAltltlSTl-llts, soucrrons, ETC M (ireat George strong MONEY TO LOAN McLEOD 8t BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. c. l§EN'I‘l.l-.‘Y, K. c, Barriatcr and Attornt-y-at-Law MONEY T0 LOAN Otiice: 180 Richmond Street Prohibition Commission Chas. ll. Black, Chairman, Charlottetown. ha. B. McDonald, West St, Peter; John Simpson, Hamilton. Send all information regarding infractions of PROBIBITION ACT to the above or to Inspector J. Fripps, R, C, M, P“ BULBS BULBS Just received and opened our Annual Fail shipment of DUTCH BULBS direct from lhc growers LISSE, HOLLAND. TULIPS (Single and Dou- bic) DARWIN Tulips stem.) HYACINTIIS (Double and Single). DAFFODILS C R 0 C U S. FIIEESIAS, NARCISSUS, &c., &c., all large size BULBS. Prices much lower. (J0me in and make your selection early. (long REG TKADI Ill-I 50%. MORESUDS MIAII\ 47".. lESS WORK MADE Iii CANADA THE COMPLETE SINGER BREAKS DOWN NEW YORK, October interrupt her singing of weet Home" during a concert. mother. and attempted to cheer her had to retire.” left after applhuding vigorously. NOTICE! HOSPITAL 1923- CAMPAIGN FUND Commerce or at the ward Island. (Std-i FRANK R. HEARTZ, 5759-10-12-171. FOR SALE Four pair Wild Geese $10.00 per pair. HOUSEHOLD SOAP zap-Mus‘ Libby Miller, secretary to Rosa Ponselle, Metropolitan Opera star, said today the singer was forced to "Home It Hartford, Conn, yesterday because of worry over the condition 0f her Reports from Hartford said Miss ‘Ponselle ceased singing and walked. iback stage and threw herself into a. chair, crying “I cannot finish it." “bliss Ponselle visited her moth- er, who is ill, on Saturday night up," Miss M ller said. "She was worried and fatigued and was so reminded of her mother's condition during the rendition of the song that she The number was one of the last on the program and the audencc PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND All subscribers in arrears are received at the Canadian Bank of Secretary's Office at Prince Edward Island Hospital, Charlottetown, Prince Ed- Ohzinnsn Campaign Fund 1923. broken to tether. Shot over Four Years, price Post Office Box G89, Fredericton, N. B. 10-15-91. FOR SALE At“ Grand Tracadic, farm of 45 acres in high state of cultivation. Convenient to church, school and shipping. Roads with large Well situated on Cross residence and out buildings in good condition. For particulars apply to MR8. J. W. MacDONALD, 4 Grafton Street, Charlottetown. 5B79-10-18-4i. Periodic— Eye Examinations Don't wear your glasses for flvs or ten yenn, l! some do. without rte-examination, for in that time serious changes Ars vitally important. who- ther one‘: eyes are good or otherwise. may take place, which if not discovered. may work per- manent iniury to the most precious sense you porous. Guard your eyes. r, u) ZORA i The Invisible n _ a. l. wnbtor 5i prise he felt at this unexpected in troductfon of a topic which had 0.1 ready caused hlm " turbatlon. London paipers." Blayne nodded. I suppose you knew Mir. Gaynor then?" “Yo: sir, I did. and n liner man I never knew. No side, 1! Y0“ ‘m’ ceramic the expression slr- A hund- red per cent a gentleman. Not that he come down here very much, sir ——t.hs service being perhaps not fw- quent enough for him-he had his car and preferred the drive to the city, and I don't blame him, sir. I! I had a car I shouldn't be troub- ling about trains. But I met. him frequently at the church. Took a great interest in it he did, and Mr. crompton-hes the rector, shy-was often up at the house in the even- ings. By the way sir, do you think he died. natural, or--" The Stut- ionmaster paused, meanliisly- "I was reading that there was some conflict of medical Ophlun over the matter," said Bluylle 11°!!- commitally. "Of course, lmowliig him as you dd, you ought to be in a better position to know whether there was anyone likely to wish him dead.” "'I'liat's what has been puzzling inc sir. Why should anyone want tn kill a. friend? I'm sure Mr. Gaylw!‘ dd u great deal of 300d in his life- time." "True enough, but a man can have enemies for all that,‘ Blayne told him. "Perhaps not. here, but elsewhere. Oaktree, you must re- member, was only one PR1‘?- Ol hi5 life." Blayne could not quite Bet 011i’ °i his mind the category into which he had unconsciously consigned Mont- gomery Gaynor for the P117905‘! °5 providing a. new chain of thouflllt in his inquiry. The statlonmaster was silent for a. moment, and Blayne. Wfl-tchlll! 111m ggrefully, was conscious that hereby notified that the Campai m“ w” .5°"‘"'""g pass“ Fund oi’ 192s is being closed, 0c- lhmllfi" ti" ma“ mm“ m“ w“- libel‘ s1, 1932. Payments will be vowing him- "I don't know whether I outbi- bo mention it, sir, but I've noticed a, change in Mr. Gaynor these but few months. I can't Gillie “P155” it, and 1 don't know whether I'm righ or not, but when I've seen him down in the village, and wmttlm“ up at the church, he hasn't 100k“! quite himself. 1i. may hive W" business worries for all I know, but somehow I don't think that that was the explanation. Matters of bus- iness don't mak s, mm seem im- easy when he's miles away 1mm London: they don't make him keep turning around as though he cXPtBClF ed to see somebody he didn't want to meet. But that's how he struck me, sr, and I was only wondering when 1 read in the papers thl-i mom ing about the inquest whether I ought to write to Scotland Yard about it. What would you Idvln. sir?" Y Blayne stood thoughtful for s moment. He was telling himself that ii: was indeed fortunate that the three-forty train to London had been taken off. Here was an utter- ly unexpected and new clue, and though mere was nothing particular- ly definite about it, it confirmed his own theory that Monflfmlefy Glyn“ had not died a natural death in spite of the hopeless lack of medi- cal evidence to the contrary. IT'S LIVER THAT MAKES YOU FEEL S0 WRETCHEB Wake Up Your Liver Bile and Get A New Lease of Life. No Caiomel Ia Necessary. For you to fssl healthy and be . your liver must rtwu pounds of liquidpgis into your l bowe . every dny of your life. Without that bile, trouble starts prompt-l . Your food iult won't digest the wsy it sh bowels sre sluggish. Food decays inside you and your entire lyltnm in uudermiurd by this poisonous wtuite nutter. You lino indiges- tion-ths dincomfo t, oi us. blontlu]. heartburn and nournc-s. You are prr-y to hudnches. Have n ton s likn cotton-wool. s only tnto in your iuout _, bed breath and ugly lkln. You lilven't siiythingiika tiui pep s uithy person should have. ln fact you are generally wretched. ilow outi you "pent to clen- u s condition lilni this oomph-vi hytnkin more val-naval like nnlu. mint-n writer, oi lsntivs esudy or Blayns tried to conceal the sur- ablo per- ‘fHn gave handsomely to the church," went on the atationrnasta. "Without him it's no secret in 68y that Oaktrcs church would almost have tumbled down. Part dates back to 1775, sir, and though they 101W how to build in those dlys better than we do today, they won't stand for ever. No, Mr. Gaynor saved Oak- tree church. Terrible affair, all‘. wasn't it? That is. I sHPPNQ 1'01!“ heard about it-it's been in all the \:...~..; ~ --r " THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN matter." thing at fll, sir." ed, guardedly. night." for the five-twenty. chance of that not running, I hope." “I can give you my word for that‘ smiled the atationmiister. Leaving the station, Blayne took the road that branched off at right- angle; from the old stone cross in the centre of the village. About a. quarter of n. mile further along a small wood skirted the s'de of the white, winding road. On the oppo‘ site side wen a number of solitary oaks set at varying distances as far as the eye could see. Whether they had once formed part of the wood- ed estate on his left, Blsyne did not know, but it was just possible that this woodland belt had, at one time, extended for some consider- able disance but when the land on his right had been cleared for agri- cultural purposes, the fringes of trees had been left by someone with a sense of th¢ artistic to border the road. ' This rather rural speculation on Blayneg part was intentionally de- liberate. He felt that if he were what the bthtloniiiaster had told him about. Gaynor in its true perspective he must first empty his mind of its previous thoughts, and this rumin- ating upon the changing face of the countryside achieved its purpose and he would soon be able to view his inquiry with that dlspassionate detachment crlihfnal investigation invariably demanded. ‘Ilien, switching over his thoughts, much in the same manner as an ef- ectrlclan changes one dynamo over to another, Blnyiie brought his brain to’ dwell upon the fact that lvliont- gcmery Gaynor had been perturbed in mind for some little time. The stutionmaster had hinted that. the diamond merchant seemed as if he expected to see someone near nini whom he did not particularly want to see. What did thlt B19511? It could only mean one thing. Mont- gomery Gaynor had been afraid. Now Blayiie knew that no normal person unless suffering from one of the many vnrietlea of phobia known in l “ l science, is really afraid unless there is very good cause for that particular mental con- dition and from what Blayne knew of the deed man, he was not the sort of person to be the V1691!" 0i a worthless and absurd hallucina- tion. It was while engrossed in this thought that something happened- with such startling suddeniiess that for the moment a. sense of the "11" real, the uncanny, enveloped him. Something whistled Dali: his head with a pecular whirring noise fol- lowed immediately by a sharp "pinfl" somewh on the other side of the road. The young man stood still, not daring m move. His brain was work- ing rapidly. Whatever it was that had gone put him had been dis- patched from the wood on his left. He glanced towards the spot. quick- ly. At that point the trees were somewhat more dense, and it would be sheer madness to vault the low wooden railing that separated them from the road and search for the person who had meds the attack. By that time the lnvlslblr; some- body might bs several hundred of yards away. Instead, Blsyne walked acrou the road and examined the trunk of the tree which was in a. direct line from where he had been at the moment he had heird that. peculiar "ping." Judging that whatever it had been would be approximately about the some height as his head, since the missls must have passed his ear for him to hear it. so distinctly. he ex- amined the rought oak bark care- fully. At first 11¢ could see nothing, but after ii while his trained eye- sight detected s. faint sparkle. Run- ning his hand lightly over the sur- face at that point he dscavered something embedded firmly in the wood. Taking h’: knife from his “It is, of course, the duty of every good cltlmi to help the police in a matter of this kind." slid Blcyuo. “A ‘llttlg nutter such u you have mentioned may be of plmmount importsnca to them in directing their inquiries into quits another ‘chlI-itfll. I should moll- MIN!!! writs to Scotland Ymi and tell them fully all you know about the “It'| not really as bad u ell that, sir. 1 might wily be mistaken. Be- sides it doesn't. prove anything . . . it merely suggests that. he was not quits himself. It irtight not be my- “I think you ought to write, all the MUM," Blayne told him. Little things like that us often the turn- ing point in criminal investigations -at least so I have read," he add- "Thmk you, sir,‘ answered the stationimster, relieved. "I'll writs to- “Well, I think 1'11 trot B10113 and look ‘at the. church," said Blayne, "and I hops I'm back again h time There's no Carter & 0o. chewing guirli, ‘or rnughlgn? 'l' s your liver bi oi old G. F. liUTiiliESiiii Avoid colnmzl (mvrcury rt-lisbls Carter's vepttibls. lure, gentle. safe, your liver without upsettinl you. Bring ). Bu yourself: ittle ivor Pills. They'll wake buck gliui-to-he-nllvn feeling, once more. hey can't wlh up be All ti: L I OPTOMETBIST Don't waste your/money on tubeiitutn. Be [M definite Ask for Ciirtn-r‘: by nsms and ptth , lmk for the nuns, (Intel's, on the red lam . ”° " '“ “W” 4' - pocket he carefully cut away the bark, and st length pried out a small "tee'-poinled dart, not more than hnlf-an-lnch long, such u are used by certain native tribes as an cf‘ fective death weapon by the lid of Tb: new Pattern Do Not Be Misled . . . Onlywgenéiine, {ii-st 11"" l y 0n o eu ‘ burs the Golgd Seallnon the surface . . . your posl- ‘ tive guarantee of Satisfae- _ tion or Your Money Bunk. [no]; for the Gold Seal 0f the genuine. IN TWO WEEKS Gold Sea! Rug "Nomad" Pattern N0. 633.‘ Pattern Na. 344. . and. make sure COUNTRY-WIDE PCDPUL C angalcum No. 652. A miracle of design; a miracle of value; no wonder these sensa-A . tional new Conpgoleum Gold Seal Rugs have started a new style trend. Everyone who sees their rich, new, colorful tones is at once enthusiastic. Never in all our long history have we oflercd such radiant; beautiful] rugs. And never in history have Congoleum Gold Seal prices been so low. Beiiutify your home and save money, with genuine, easy-to-cleam flat-lying Congoleum . . . guaranteed to your lusting satisfaction by the Gold Seal on the surface. coucouavn CANADA IJMITED, MONTREAL QNGOLEUM RUGS ARIN (R OCTOBER 21.11932 m WP ti" Blayne stood staring down at the little dart as it lay in the palm of his hand. It was an ugly yet neat 11ml! "link. and ha‘ it entered h's temple instead of the tree, he would have been removed from the neces- sity of further conducting his re- searches into the mysterious death of Montgomery Gaynor. The thought made him shudder. The meth ’ employed was diaboli- cal, for that innocent steel point might even yet be impregnated with some virulent pdson. » Carefully he took out his pocket book, and allowed the evil weapon to fall lightly into an empty com- partment. "Seems as if I'm not as popular he continued his way along the road Just as if nothing at all had happen- ed. (To Be Continued) With Fair Sex “Hitting The Pipe” NEW YORK, Oct. m-Daiiity pipes for ladies‘ with small briar howls of novel shapes and stems in .shades and designs to match cos- ‘tumes, are on the market. A spec- ially prepared tobacco of a com- paratively coarse cut has been put up in an attractive package about the size of a deck of cards espec- to‘ pipe-smoking. At the tobacco counter of a large department store, where a. selection of the pipes is on view, it was said that pipe-smoking hld already been taken up by women intho U. 5., but. on n small. seals. It was explained that some women who had been complaining that cigarettes "did not have s sufficient kick," now were smoking pipes, Others, it. was sold, were smoking cigars. One customer has ben coming to the store for years buying cigars for tier own use. Inquiry disclosed that women who indulge in pipe-smoking coma from various walks of life: some are ef- ficient young business executive... and others wives of moderately 9-! I thOIIShhI WES." he mused. B-iially for use of the women inclined iwen"’°'d° men‘ Pipimimoking by lteeth are liable to attachment if tlit women, however, not yet. has bee! taken up in public to any extent, although the number of women using a pipe, it was explained. h" been increasing. LAW HAS FALSE TEETH IN IT N0“ BAN RRANDISOO: Oct. ith-‘Tht law has teeth in it nova-false one: The San Francisco Better Bulineii Bureau said today custom-mule person who eats with them still owes money on the muticnton Under this biting phase of the hi. a finance company is searching for c, woman who is on instalment 1 hind on her molars. 1 eblowpips.