<&1r|4dv‘s4A'- - FRED CIIAPPED HANDS QflSoothed, softened, whitened-OVERNIGHT ~ - people Ncaxa for afloa- for any 19511:: use. Hcr_e'a'v;v_hyi P59! 01117 ll - '_'fl@ O ' 3,, m; al doefir sofas usaillm. dnbotlytdoessllrhis ' qsidlyl Appl Noxzema might (u lasgb _ 4| rbulin wi Iabmb) and notice a big ; improvement in the morning! llfossdarfislforSkinFaulsgaool 7T0 gain new beauty-to refine the tu~ ruse oi‘ your ski n—to quickly clear sway alun blemishes, use Noxsems as s ,', tcrcam and duringthedsyasa. = ‘bumktion for powder. A osoaosrovs sus srnvlcr Yhflardlganandllewpoldlbrry -I.oad Ipavcs Pharlottelown ... 4.00 p. m. , Daily service. Parcels carried. INCREASING KNOWLEDGE y The knowledge of the lunc- ol seeing and the detec- fXmaS Cards PRINTED TU O R D E R Your name prinled on your Christmas greeting means the utmost in sincere wishes. Phone 133 Today The Guardian Gentrai Job Printery Charlottetown alalsdrinsa new!" economical aidwoihlonemsst a gwissgiliiweelllldpflfill * ‘tomb Sill-Giiilillmdiyl‘ ycaraurestdrugordepsrrmearstore. SAVE 24¢ gixtbisassresniagfrdiolifllilfim 33%.. '9‘ El Noncms for fifsldcs ALL DRUG AND DEPARTMENT ITDBIS Dace Soldier New departures in military uni- forsnof interest to "W"! °| Canadian army are shown in this photo from Italian warfront. Dace s miners don't have notion. viii wear sun hornets and msiw 1"" stead ol "lronhats." also. wine is saved as part ol regular ration. for water is short. ' When Poisons illog ll l ll ll E Y 3 and irritate Bladder Juan-ST 1111s Go to your druggcst today and get this sale. swift and harmless diuretic and stimulant-ask for Gold Medal liaaricm Oil Capsules and start at ones io flush kidneys of waste mat- ter saturated with acids and poisons. That's the way to bring about healthy kidney activity and stop that bialisicr irritation which alien causal scanty passage with slnarting and burning as well as restless night, Remember, the kidneys often need flushing as well as the bowels, and some symptoms of kidney weakness are: Getting up once or twice dar-ing the night-—pulfy eyes -cramps in logy-backache and moist palms. But hs sure and get GOLD MIDAL Hssrlem Oil Capsules the riginal and genuine --right from Hsarlem in Holland —ths prlca is small (40 canis). the good results will fal- liii your expectations. Charlottetown Fur Receiving Station cauanran nan-romp smvan rox sarcomas assocmnos r Illlliilll. desiring to place pelts on London, 10th Salas skoaid have theirs at depot here, Buildiag, Keat Street. not later A ms . Tile Gsstral Guardian ¢@u¢— This column ls roses-vol for paws sf local lalassat hat adnrtldss as a newly nature be llsital at a casts a word y payable ll advance- oonnosaarrou uys mova- anon. m-rss-v-ia-sia lNTlltT-AlNlD-Among the hoa- tesses last weekwas Mrs. P. J Mac- Milian, who entertained nine tables of bridge at her home, Fitzroy St. IOIIIINF-libeoang Sunglo Rat- icns exclusively, has given super- ior results wherever fed, The cost is lowest. L-Miil. BIS!‘ SILVER. I03 FELT, larch Iondon Sale out of 80.000 skins, was Till I800! OI Till PUDDING IS IN Till lATINGF-Our Ranch is siwafl open to Visitors. Come and seq for yourself, Iok Pups grown ex- clusively on Sunglo libeds. Interest- ing Experiments being aouduciod. International Box a Animal lroods. td. L-Bbtli-l-m-tue-sst. IIQI.‘ ROYALTY IOIOOL Honor Roll for September and October:- Grsde X-i. Ilene Curley; 2. Jennie Cudmosc. Grade IK- (arJ-l. Grace Crosby; z. MarianneJ-facKinnon: 3. Maurice Curley. Grade 11- (jrJ-i. Georgina 'l‘raiaor; 2. Lois Hurry; 3. Pius Carley. Grade VIII-J. Paul MacKay; 2. George Crosby; 3. Irene Frizzla and Keith Pickard. Grade VI-i. Ruth MacKinnon; I. Bertha Hurry; 8. Lloyd Gates. Grade V.—1. Marjorie Long; 2. Billy Long; 3. John Macxinnon. Grade 1V—1. Doris Pickard: 2. Jean Frizzle and Loretto Trainer (equal); 3. Velma Burke. Grade III-1. Joseph Ourley; I. Margaret Gales; 3. Margaret Curiey. Grade I (a) -Harold Gates: 2. Sterling Frizzie; 8. Carl Crosby. Grade 1 (b) —Bil1y Rhynes; 2. Alex R . Grade 1 (c) —Jean Rhynes; 2. Francis Gallant. S. Bruce, (Teachers). K. MacKinnon IIORELL SCHOOL Senior Dept. Grade X—(Sr.) 1. Mary Kelly; 2. Marion Gallant; 3. Maurice Cof- fin. Grade X-Jfi.) 1. Lewis Ros- aiter; 2. Waiter Coffin; 3. Frankie Coffin. Grade IX—1. Helen Cox; Mary Roselter; 2. Mildred Jay. Grade VIII-l. Margaret Mae- Ewen and Ivan MacDonald (equal) l2. Hubert Coffin; 3. Pauline Kel- Y 2. Grade VII-l. Reginald Elder- shaw; 2. Alphonsus Kelly; 3. Maurice Mllflihy. Grade VI—l Alexis Kelly; Lloyd Cox; 3. Evelyn Geldert. 2. Junior Dept, Grade V-l. Florrie l-lawbclt; 2. Catherine Coffin; 3. Bernadine Kelly. Grade IV- fsr.) i. Margaret Kelly; 2. Joseph McInnis; 3. Jackie Rossiter. Grade IV- (Jr) 1. Teresa. Cof- ‘fyin; 2. Reggie McAdam; 3. Giles ay, . Grade III-l. Catherine Kelly: 2. Jean McAdam; 3. Grace Rob- bins. Grade II—1. Lois Cox; 2. Helena Rnssiber; 3. Gerard McInnis, Grade I (sr).-—l. Teresa Rossiter and Harry Robbins (equal); 2. Joyce Jay; 3. Helen Coffin. Grade I (Jr.)-— Helen Mac- Donald: 2. Robert Watson; 3. Owen Kelly. WOMAN 0N BOARD FOR FIRST TIME (By The Canadian Pres) ZIALIFAX, Nov. li-The femin- ine touch soon will be evident in the administration of Hallfaxs school affairs. A woman is going to be taken on the school board for the first time in the city's history of al- most 200 years. And she says she's going to take her job seriously. She is Mrs. H. L. Stewart, wife of a professor of Dalhcusie Unf- verxity, and mother of two boys and s. girl who have had outstand- scholastio at the" Hali- fax County Academy. Though ithc work is entirely new to her, Mrs, Stewart says she hopes to contribuie something toward im- ,. vlng standards in the schools. It is her beiief that the appoint- ment of a woman makes the board more representative and that the feminine outlook should be of value flo the members on important top- Eeather In Her Hat“ (Continued from Page 2)‘ watched I40 mounting the steps. head down, fists tiihtiy clenched. "L" .. He looked up, his face vrim. "Lee—-wae it—-0arl‘l" . Ha nodded. vaguely. "He tried to throw ‘the " nator out. We were over the monument and he had hisbacksgatnsttlwdoor . . ."Be was talking with effort.“ The Sena- torbrokslooseand clung to a chair. I--—I pulled the ship over and-—- the door open . . ." She could hear his teeth gritting. "I can't tell yon any meme now. anti. my nerves are-pretty well o .” " “Yes, I know," Ann said. "I'll be at the aparianent when you want me, lee." "they've gone inside to 1st a shot of whisky." Mollie they hurried toward the car with Charlie Briggs, the Globe reporter who had brought them to the air- port. "Cari confessed the whole bloody business to the Senator. Ann. Pretender! he was drunk all the way from Chicago and then when he was getting ready to throw the Senator out, he told him how he had killed hh secretary and his son . . ." As they were leaving, another ear slipped by. Charlie Big; recognis- ed Bill Hudson behind the wheel, but he didn't say anything. 'I'he gruesome incredible story was told fully in The Sunday Globe next morning. Ann was ems-ted. when she thought about it later, how closely Bill's solution of Fuhr- rnan's murder followed the facts. Only those little details which he could not possibly have known were- lackin g. One of these concerned the after- noon the Senator sent for Carl to eject Fuhrman Wells from the Runbrecker estate . . Carl had pretended in be Pullman's friend, had told him that he, too, had a score against the Senator and had proposed that together they could square accounts. After he left Maine's apartment that night, Cari went to Puhrmasfs room to explain his plan, already neatly worked out to the last small detail . . . I-le would put a. dummy in the reflecting pool. At a. given hour the next evening Fuhrman would call the Senator and, talking through a handkerchief, would say the Senator's secretary had been drowned in the reflecting pool and ask the Senator to come down and help the police esbablish posi- tive idenlllilcation. Fuhrman was then to hurry to the pool and, when the Senator and Carl arrived, point out the dummy. From there on Carl would take charge. He would set off the con- cussion bomb and, when they fell into the water, would strangle the _Senator with a piece of copper wire. Fuhrman agreed. So Carl had suggested to Selma that she play-a. little trick on a select group of her guests and the only hitch had been that Selma. who knew nothing of Iiuhrmanb part in it, persuaded Deane to tele- phone from the private wire m his father's study. Deane had tried to dial the other phone in the house but had gotten a busy signal be- cause Fuhrman was then talking from his own rooms. Carl himself had carried the books and the wire and the ficlti- tious autobiographical sketch to Fuhrmnns place when he had gone there the night before. The sketch Cari took from his pocket at an op- portune moment and slipped behind a shell of books-for the police to find. The books and the wire he “forgot? Carl's story do Senator Run- breoker showed that he had made his plans just as carefully and well in advance for the murder of Deane .'I'hat Boston was the scene of his crime was due to the fact that Lee innocently provided an opportunity to inject a little addi- tional mystery into the brutal business. The telegram asking Lea to pick up data for a Congressional investigation was sent by Carl, cf course.‘ When Bill drove Cari and Deane to Cambridge and Deane went into the Harvard yard, Carl immed- iately took the subway back to Boston where he arranged for the boxes supposedly containing data for the Congressional injuiry into munitions, and stumbled into the brass shells in a. second-hand fur- niture shop. Before he encountered Deane again-at the hotel-he had DnWoods This is the you awake at ios. this coughin HMO! kind that bothers you during the was urlakiurrmuwu GUARDIAN . hall?‘ lniess E sealed box and “r1 was back in the doors v per cent of the city's public build- ings) lolethimsclfintbe, ud- ievei door under the Home Win! siepsolimbed two flllhts of stairs to the plan “fiery and slid over- the railing and dropped to the floor of the House. Having propped Deane'a body 11.1 the‘ 5953"’! chair, he rmealad the box, climbed back to the press gallery and re- traced his stell- It. was necessary that Dean's body be found while he, Carl, was in Boston. He therefore unlocked the door at the main entrance in the Housemrotc on the door with chalk, where to look for Donne's body, locked tho door again and went on down and out the way he had come in. Hall an hour later Carl was aboard a plane retmniag to Boston. - Nothing was said 1n the news- papers cl Selmab affair with main-man. Selma heiself said it had been "a perfectly idiotic infat- uation" and that no one would have known anything about it if Deane hadn't gone to Pubs-man's apartment one evening and found her there . . . Until then. Selma said, Deane and Fuhrman had been on the besi- of terms, but thereafter were "forever at each others throats." , Whatever feeling Selma had had for liuhrman it was short-lived and a1 on the scene. But. lulu-man had never quite accepted his abrupt dis- missal. On the day that Ann Illil Rita arrived in Washington, he had threatened to tell Cari a scandal- ous and wholly false story of what their relations had been. when, therefore, he appeared at Maine's apartment that night. she WM frightened. and gave way to her pent-up feelings. That night she asked her father to discharge him. Senator l was never able to explain how the voice-muf- fling telephone device got into his den: drawer, but Carl must have put it there. Iiior Ann, one interesting ques- tionre ‘ ’ tobcanswered: how much of the autobiographical sketch found in lulu-man's rooms had been true? ‘Prue, that is. as Carl's own? The latter part of it was obvious- ly a. utilization of such knowledge as Carl had of Fuhrmairs affair with Selma. The first part the police ‘ ’ as possibly authen- tic; but they were not able to check anything more than that the books mentioned had actually been published and that the mysterious Dr. Chezaiee was never identified. Belma’s theory, however, was that Carl Balzner had planned to kill her brother and her father and then to marry her and got possess- ion of the Runbrecker fortune. The autopsy revealed that Carl's brain was diseased and whether the motive was 1 enmity or an aberation involving an experi- ment in criminology. it was the opinion of the medical examiner that Carl bad suflered from a form of insanity for years. - 0 B O O O O As Ann insisiedshc could not leave the apartment Sunday until Lee arrived, Mollie invited Mr. and Mrs. Rogers up to the apartment for dinner. Mrs. Rogers tied on an apron and helped Mollie while Ann, Rita and Mr. Rogers talked about every- thing but the tragedy. Rita had cried herself to sleep lest night, but today she was calm and un nsd. 'Iihis substan- tiated Ann's belief that Rita's ap- parent affection for Cari was, in its essence, her genuine dislike for Selma. lho iissgll lilai Siiciu The Golgi: lilsi iissgs 0s cough it is hard to i. rid of, the y sad keeps night. Why not get a bottle of Dr. Wood ’s Norway Pine Syrup and see how it will relieve you of lilaicki t acts promptly, going coadit ca. straight. to t e foundation o! the trouble, loosening the ,“ _, , soothing the irritated air passages, strengthening the bronchial organs. Your llruggist will recommend "Dr. Wood's". It has been on the market for its past M years. iris tm minutes, Deane was dead in s ‘ ended definitely with Carl's arriv-I “ERIN TURNS ROY FROM RING; ’ . NOW EVANGIIJSI‘ (By The Canadian Pram) HALHFAX, Nov. IL-Lithe Roy lviitcheil, the Halifax negro who looked like a coming Sam Lang- ford a few years back, hopes none of his friends will believe the re- port that he's been scconding a fighter down Aniigonish way. Iibr Roy has religion now, and tn; ring to him is something to he shunned. And the energy that once went inward belting over the best in the Madtimes ha uses now to aprcdd the gospel through the Annapolis Valley. Roy was sort or grieved when he wandered into the newspaper of- flee with the news. Someone had said he was in this bcxer‘s corner lately. "I iwps you'll correct it,’ he said. "I wasn't in the corner. I haven't been in the ring since I was converted a couple of years ago." Boy ex-rfained that he had his farm. his wife and daughters, and hlslpreaohing, to keep him busy now. "Oh, yes, I preach a little down the valley too," he told the surprised sports writer. Did he have a church? "No. N0 church", fioyjaid, but he waved that aside. "Churches don't mean everything. It's the way, ybu live.” “But you'll make that correction" he asked, a little aruriously, as he moved along. "You know, people mightrrt understand." MOOSE DWINDLING IN ‘ NOVA SCOTIA (By Th, Canadian Press) HALIFAX, Nov. 1i—A closed season on Nova. Bcotia moose for nine years is advocated by Harold McCrecken, editor of “Field and Stream," who says the herds are faced with extinction. After a trip through the moose country, Mr. McCrlcken reported he had sighted several females but not a single bull moose. There should be a more proportionate ra- tio between them hg held. Unless a, closed season is pro- claimed to allow the bulls to gain a foothold, Mr. McCreoken said, the herds would ba faced with perhaps irreparable depletion in five years. Shortly after two o'clock there was a knock on the door, and Rita cried out, “Behold the bride- m . . . .1" Ann had started to the kitchen with a stack of plates. Mollie opened the door and a deep drawi- ing voice said, "And now, friends of the radio audience, we offer for your sate.‘ lament a lii-tla skit en- titled—-" A deafening crash iendad that. Bill Hudson looked at the shatter ed dishes at Ann't feet. "You dropped something, Hunt," he said. Ann did not. smile, did not move. Rita said, "Bill Hudson clown- ing again . . . ‘Where's Lee Mon- “y?” Bill's eyes were fastened on Ann's curiously pale face now. "I just saw him oil," Bill replied. "He's on his way to California." Be put his fists on his lips and stared above a whisper. She put a hand cnhissleeveaslftomakesurs Nosnviwfl at Common llaii, in TOUGH‘ GOING FOB , N. Eth BOOKIIS (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX. Nov. 8—Jsok MoGiil, blond of Montreal Can- adiens, tefls you why the amateurs aver: the beat of them-dent look so good their first season in the National Hockey Inague. "Coming to the big time," says the winger, starting his second season out of the simon-pun; ranks, "means L o‘ _, completely your style of play. If you're a. regular in an amateur loop, you're likely to play about 40 of the 60 minutes. You don't have to play at top speed all the time. You wait for a break atnd then try to make the most of i . "You're baffled when you get info your first N. I-l. L. game. Being a rookie. 7011111 probably get ill min- utes on the ice. In that time you have to go at top speed. You can't wait for the breaks; you have to make them." ENJOYS ‘NOVIIDEEB DIP AT 05 YEARS (By The (hnadian Press) WATERBIJJE. N. 8., Nov. ll. — Chill November waters of the Cari- bou River mean little to Mrs. Simon MacKenzie. despite her 65 years. When Mrs. Harold Tingley o! Trenton came here to sce~ her mother, they fold her she could be found down by the river. flnglgy found m: miovins s swim- money. WHITE. PLEASE!) WITH ISLAND EAUT! (By The Canadian Press) KINGSTON, Jamaica. NOV. ll~. Altar visiting Jamaica's beauty. spots, Miss Helen Keller. blind Am. erican writer and lecture had praised the island's scenery, which she said was "so varied in its beauty." Accompanied by her teacher and old friend, Anne Sullivan Lucy, and her secretary, Miss Polly Thompson, the distinguished auth- or spent one week in Jamaica and visited St. Ann's Bay, Roaring Riv- er Falls, ltaiho Rios and Fern Gully. The beauty of the contrasting scenery she was able to see through the eyes of Mrs. Macy. the friend who years ago transformed her from a blind. deaf-mule and helm lesschildinioaioyearoidgiri so highly intelligent she was hailed as a prodigy. At Rm Gully, Miss Keller said she touched the wonderful fora growth and at Roaring River had been thrilled when she dipped her hand in the c001 wafer. Before leaving she said she would do something for Jamaica's blind, particularly the older ones who cannot learn Brains. She mlsed to send books and 8111M 1"‘ oorcssotheymishtbelbleiiflhw the great works more forinmete persons read. Asked what book she would send first, Miss Keller refill!!! Th‘ Bible." “I will send a nowl or perhaps 1:33am’; Progress‘ afterwards." she concluded. YOU can depend upon I! D I S ON M A Z D A Llmpl U0 give yml full value in light for the current con- sumed. Buy them by the cag- ton at today's law Psi“; mg get the most light for your rmsou MAzoK LAM PS CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC 60., Limited MAUI IN CANADA‘ -av sconce MCMANUS I if