I 175 Queen Street ltiiiuli- ill case . - - PAGE Two CASH CO-OPERATIVE i THE CONSUMER BONUS CONTEST Running From Saturday, September l7 to Sat. Oct. 8, 1938. (OUPONS SUPPLIED FREE BY THESE FIRMS, ONE COUPON FOR EVERY 25c TRANSACTION. OPEN T0 EVERYBODY R. P. SIMPSON —l..»\l)lES‘ ItEAl)Y-'I‘()-\\'EAR Established headquarters for Quality I-‘(isliicirzs at Ei-orioniicril Prices THE l'.~ilt"1'l('l'l..»iI€ .S‘7'()RE FOR , PARTICULAR LADIES! 09 Queen Street - - Phone 236 P. J. MacDONALD GROCERIIIS — FLOUR — FEEDS NIEAT — FISH — VEGETABLES 4 FRUIT (‘ONFICGFIONEIIY -- ICE CREAM — BEVERAGES COUPONS DELIVERED WITH YOUR ORDERS PLEASE ORDER EARLY Phones SSS-SSE) b J. P. CROCKETT’S Stove and Furniture Business is growing steadily THERE’S A REASON Small expenses mean Lower Prices. (‘ROCKETTS can save you money too. Telephone 834 f‘ y. I It‘. v iCorner Prince and Kent Streets YOUNG“ AND OLD T. G. STUDEILAKER - HUDSON — WILLYS AUTOMOBILES — BUSES — TRUCKS Fawcctt Stoves, Furnaces, Air Conditioning ’l‘iniken Silent Automatic Oil Burners Refrigerators — Goodrich Tires Hostess Automotive Heaters, Batteries, Service & Accessories 219 Great George Street TOM DAVIES OPERATING RED INDIAN SERVICE STATION Corner Great George and Fitzroy Streets GAS, OIL, WASHING, POLISHING, SIMONIZING GREASING‘ ACCESSORIES Change your oil and grease now for Fall and winter driving. ITIE CHAR] OWTEI‘! IWIN nIIARniArv IVES Phone 1117 JOHNSON & JOHNSON The Quality Drugstore Prescriptions a Specialty Prompt Delivery Service Household Remedies, Toiletries, Smoker’s Supplies, Stationery High Class Confectionery Corner Prince and Kent Streets Phone 33 in: ROGERS HARDWARE t.‘().\ll'.~\N\' LUIITICI) WHOLPISALIE AND RETAIL Shelf and Heiny Ilardware l’.\l.\"l‘S — VARNISIIES — ICNARIELS — ROOFING GUNS —- ltll-‘LFIS — SII ELLS — CAWFRIDGEIS SlLYlrllthh-Xltl‘) -— l)lNI\'I<IIt\\'.~\Rl<I (‘LITIERY Sole Licensees for NEVAWET SERVICE cwoiiici.i~zr€‘s§uvics ron ALL THE FAMILY DAMP WASH, SEMI-FINISHED 8: COMPLETELY FINISHED SERVICES FROM 49c UP. — ALSO DRY CLEANING AND DYEING —- 0 Established 1888 TELEPHONE 1M The Charlottetown Guardian “Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew" ALL THE NEWS WORTH PRINTING. ALL THE ADS WORTH READIN INt‘Itl‘I.-\SE YOPR CHANCES OI" WINNING (‘iiy Country 2i months [‘l.2.'>- 5 coupons $l.00-- 4 coupons ti months 2.50—ll| coupons 2.00- 8 coupons I year Mitt-ill) coupons ~l.iit)--l6 coupons (‘oilpons on Subscriptions (Iiily Great George Street MILLER BROS. Ltd. Everything in Music, Musical Instruments, and Accessories PIANOS .—_0RGANS - RADIOS Westinghouse Electric Washers, Irons, Rrefrigerators, Vacuum Cleaners, etc. Phone 555 ITS nu: rAut OF THE TOWN and WHOLE" H PROVINCE! THERE ARE 4O PRIZES THERE’LL BE 40. WINNERS If you are interested in Contests- and who lsn't?-—here's a real one —mode to order. These firms are co-operating in sponsoring what is now considered the greatest event of the season. Of Calif-it‘. the contest is being promot- ed for advertising purposes, but it has been arranged so that every man. woman and child in this pmv. ince may partic pate. F‘or each 25c transaction at any or all of these firms you will receh o a coupon. You simply Write our name and address on the bacli of khgicoupon and deposit it with the There are forty prizes to be awarded as shown. $140.00 in cash prizes and $20.00 in special surprise awards. Wouldn't you like to win that first rizc of $50.00 in cash. Well-mu)‘ e you will. Someone is certain to get it! Buy all your can from these ten firms (luring these three Weeks. The more coupons you deposit the more likely you are to win a prize. This contest will positively close on Saturday. October 8, 1938 at 8.30 P. M. and the drawing will take place immediately following. Cliief of Police Birtwhistle ha: consented to draw foi- the lucky coupons, and the exact time and lace will be announced in plenty of ime. This Contest is being sponsored and managed entirely by these local firms. and will be conducted exactly as outlined here. Remember, each coupon gives you a chance on 40 separate prizes- that's 160 chances to every dollar left with these firms. But get. busy today. Deposit your coupons. There's no1"red tape"—-4O persons will win pr us. You owe it to yourself to try your level DESI. to win. It costs you nothing! HERE ARE TNE PRIZES: 1st Prize -——--— —- -— ——- C1180 $50-00 2nd Prize ——--— — -— —-——C8Sh $30-00 3rd Prize ——- —— —— —— Cash $15-00 TWO PRIZES 0F $5.00 EACH FIVE PRIZES OF $3t00 EACH TEN SPECIAL $2.00 PRIZES TWENTY PRIZES OF $1.00 EACH .WHICH i ONE OF THE PRIZES WILL BE YOURS? SFPTEMREB 11. was \\\\\\\\- \»'~‘“\\ DEAL wiTn THESE TEN FIRMS-“SECLOIRE ALL rue coupons YOU can THE MORE COUPONS THE BETTER YOUR CHANCE TO WIN. MLSS NAPOLEON By vioit-T MEIHLEY -i l).i.\.\tll l‘u~ (‘Hill stands that; and he “us that I‘d lil 2o cl ll‘ iii, in. .r apply for a pu go ut Once; tun‘. t. . dicn ‘illugvll be proviting OOptlllps f0 ‘t uan. ttf- well 1 send homo the families soon 110'. n letter. lip r-xpects Wilson liali. uh i ll ki-ipiug "l new _ Hall looked thought- n broth. r2; l'\l' upon -:.=:c from iul. leaning forward in his chair as tho llfili-l u: In il:i])"l iounil ll"l' CIIHSKI" xvoni on rather unsmadily. wading i: on ill“ i~ ti-ririrlii "Of course it's-it's very hard to - ,’ ‘ll place ill haw to think of Rniinv as actually it'll]. And. as in ilu- fighting; I darcnW. think of she illuriiutivvlj. laugiietl it. But I know it's where he'd want to bc. and it's a great comfort to q Hail, it's u lctinr from have heard from him. to be certain Chi-i H" ‘tllll huu quire ‘I if what he wants me to do. It's the "A spit-lulu! lollt! lct- wailing that's so impossible . " ll- -|' lp- inultlii‘! "()1 course; that's so always. Hl'])lilill)I'l' Wi-il 1' Hnll lennt back and sur- iwl li|i‘i'i'—~", w-ycri his outstretched legs con- . iomplatircly. I think that the soon- , ilrvnv a lom: er I make a move too, now, the l .illlt'lllll‘-i ilk!‘ the better. I may be able to find some ‘t o: u (‘iflllfi .\I"'llll‘(l in pass useful job in Europe. even if the niIIIII‘ mild n her eves U. S. A, don't off cially come into ui- l: w morn ur l-.. the war as I hope thcv wllll" "iliv ||I.I>‘v- ' "Do you mean you'd join the t». n! must thrilling} manta Army?" Chrissie asked eag-i Irtur I mur’. read l erly ~ ' siw rllflilvfl um thin "Or the French. I might do worse.‘ ‘i ' Or I may be more use in a Red. Cross job Anyway. once your pass-l Stilt? -s fixed up. I‘l feel free to start off myself and get on with it." i "You mean, you've been waiting all this time for my sake? Oh! Mr. . ln-i \'!)l(‘t' shaken Hull, it was very, very good of ou- and I don't know what I B 01110 haw- done without you. I really don't!" "'lli:\t's all right. I might even be able m gel, n vinssage back to Eiilfll." iii the Foul" Vi!‘ "s 3/0"“ t‘ u-lzirh would be betlrrnstill: “cal loo "li’)fl to h" now blc. . simnlv splendid!" . : " fervently i "no.1 in y~~~r~-- m "Fnlenrwi <~..-<: sWnle rwell. I Ilc undcr- rumor doubt that!" l-iall commenled dilly. "But ii I don't manage it. it W0ll'l. be for the wiuit ol trying." There followed anither period of waiting which was even more har- assing than that which had gone before But passages were secured at last, and the almost unhoped-for, des- polred-oi journey was about to be- gin. Hall by the exercise of more diplomacy than he would ever have bcl cvcd himself to possess. had ob- tained the right to travel in the trooper. Together they stood on the deck of S. S. Berkshire and watched Bombay receding behind their ship's wake as the steamer kept on ts steady course towards the horizon. This was their inst glimpse of India. Across the silver waters of the harbour, from the clustered ship- png at the guays. tiny skirts and wide-sailed hows skimmed like butterflies in the sunlight. The gateway to the country of the Great Raj closed gradually, leaving only a memory of the miir- mur of voices. temple bells and drum-beats. all blending even ln remembrance i-nm a lessening hum M the land receded. faded into the distance. "I wonder shall we ever see it all again." Chrissie said under her breath. "I wonder!" Hall echoed. At the sound of a voice, utterly unexpected. which spoke behind them. Chrissie and Hall turned aim- ultaneously-cried out, almost in One breath: "Leonie!" She stood there. hands in the pockets of her grey coat. the bla'k, three-cornered hat tilted iorward to shade her eyes, looking 5o precisely as Shf‘ had upon the Glorlana that Hall glanced almost involuntarily up at the" man mast. as though scekln the familiar house-flag of the At antic ferry. It ivas as thwurh time itself had taken a EFF!" Stride backwards of eialitctn months or more ‘Leonie how amaang tllfli You Shniilrl h~ hem!" Chrissie k""l»"-'1 "Why? Was I not. until latch‘ on?‘ of the household of an oticer in the Indian Army?" Her tones were soB/Iediterranean, that Hall questioned level. so unstressed, that it was per- haps only Hall's ultra-keen ear which caught the faint nllection of biting scorn, "Yes . . of course. yes only . . . ' Chrissie stammered con- fusediy, and Leonie smiled. "Not that I asked for a passage as the Maharajalrs ex-governess. I merely used his name and my ex- perience at Khotalghar to get an- other t of the same kind with a Ooloneb wife, since money alone would not do it. 1 intended to come bv this boat if it was in an way ssible in order to be wit you wo . ." Her eyes softened slight- ly, then resumed their former alert watchfulness. "That is, if neither of you has an overwhelming objection to my company," she added ab- ruptly. "You know me better than that," Hall answered, while Chrissie added earnestly: , “Oh. Leonie, I'm so glad you're here!" "That's well. then. I should have been extremely bored with e ex- elusive company of my colonel‘: wife and her progeny. There's noth- ing toldo, really: They've 0t an ayah, whose passage I paid. ylhe way. so as to secure the privilege of travelling to Marselles as one of Colonel Belman's party. A queer, topsy-turvy business, if you come to think of itl" "You're going in France then - not Eflflland?" "Certainly not England." "And-you're not coming back to India?" "No. I failed there. or I shouldn't: be here. And if I hadn't failed. you m izht not be here either." "Oh. she's'taikimz like the Sphinx again!" Chrissie looked across at Hall "That always moans she doesn't mean to tell anvthlne" ‘(There's nothing to tell." Leonie at Sh» tumeii awnv abiuptly and In" the moment no morn was sa'd. I’ WIN vieekq later. lr-dvori no‘ urtl the" o'er» nrarniz Mar'~""'e.= on n. black and wmdkss night in the 3 again-in fiance ' her further. Constantly as they were “Yes. we shall‘ .1 knw mat all three together during the voy- age. there had been CULOUSIY little intimate conversation between mam, _. ..__. . .. ..,.. I The steamer was forging steadily through the darkness, one of a oon- voy 0i dim lightless shapes, part of the very night itself. That sense of stealth. of the presence of an un- seen enemy. marked the difference between these nights at sea and those of ce-tlme voyagers. It was as though the ship herself were groping, blindfold. communicating her own feeling of helplessness to all those on board. Hall, standing with Leonie near tho bows, overlooking the forecastle head, made a little restless move- ment, "I'm glad we're near the end of the voyage-although there i! still time-—- "But nothin will happen." He could Just mafia out the pale blur of Leoniels profile beside hm as she spoke. "Oh! don't ask me how I knowi I do-thafs all." "And when we reach France - have you still no plans? You're de- From the e.i ., . the lascar from the telling the silent ship, night, that "All ees well!" "Ali's welli" Leonie words under her breath. GU could say that--" CHAPTER XXII deep down into his off to trudge back to was the wet blackness of Onl was thud and rattle. The truce on the Western front Christmas. “Yes. I have some bulsness to put through in Paris. After that — I don't know-mince I can't enlist in the Foreign Legion. Something has come to an end-and I don't yet see a fresh beginnin . More and more I find m self hold ng on to somcthi < sai : "Nothing is done. unt time is nothing to be done!" And i believe I have something more to do yet-why. I don't know. Perhaps it is because my Star in still leading me, although it. is hidden in this blackness of war, like all the rest of u5___.. “I had thought, m self, erhaps. or joining a Prenci am ulance. after I've seen Chrissie safely back lo Ehizlnnd. according to my prom- ise." "all told her. "AhL-yes, that mght be a way" Leonie spoke as thnunh more io ylmrse" than l-rn. "The W“? Poli- maty-l don't know.‘ ed. No truces there: remembered Sedan, hag to t there. would be ramm to the repo Department and opinion in In the section where Hal i-lle Junction between the and British. there had been a dlsvhct made movements of and it's about the limit of my knowledge at present. Ahl-llsten!’ true-room came the tinkle of six be s, 11 o'clock. It was followed by the sing-song voice of crew's nest, the silent echoed the "Ah l--if “A MERRY CHRISTMAS" Hall sighed. thrust his hands pockets and set the ru factory where his ambulance unit tmnporarily stationed, through th winter along the eastern horizon ere an intermittent glare to the accompaniment of a ceaseless re was no finitely landing at Marseilles. aren't n-Iiigi "iiimifmdiiiiis “uigidgdm: you?" grimmer spirit had always prevail- they rather despised their Allies f0r y elding to such sentimentality, these men who whose father! ow, , there was a feelln growing tension in the atmosp ere which already foreboded a new en- emy offensive, to be launched; so it grins pelleved, against the French on . libiactly whereedthe‘ main 80%]! une was e om: really logen QUE-HUGH, according o the Intelligence cneral. stationed some kilometres south if French ticularlv bad spell of weather and “"Anyh0w.'we shall probably meetmindlitrfifisipptirtowl; peculiar- 100* ined this of WBS par- i_v difficult and an ugly local attack had developed a day or two before the actual festival itself, the enemy bombarding the French from heights held by them in compara- tive dryness and comfort, then storming the waterlostoo. wretch- edly situated trenches on the lovw- er ground. Casualties had been heavy and the difflculties in the way of re- moving and tending the wounded ve great. amibulancw were busy Eight Ind day bringing the umd aid posts andcasualty clearing stations before removing them fur- ther down the line. The conditions had been hideously bad for drivers and stretcher-bearers alike, with roads swept by artillery fire, shell- gitted, sllppeiy with mud. sleet and Alf-melting snow. Hall had trumped the mile and a half into the half-demolished vil- loge to make intxulries concerning a. family who had een left morooned i-héffi. with the mother and two of the nine children injured by the shell which had destroyed their house. He heard the story from one of the ambulance orderlies. told with a shrug. for what could be done? The hospital was over-crowd- ed ahead —the doctors over-busy. was plodding. Hall turned actdq climbed through a wall ap, rm stumbling across a field. a. ort cut which brought him first to the des- tination by a split second or two. One of the over-laden ambulance! had Just lurched heavily and creak- lngly into the cobbled square in from. of the ruined su ar-beet. fac- toryg the shattered br ck shell of wh h had been turned into a. tem- porary hospital, manned by the newly-arrived French Ited Cross detachment. In the wet and gusty darkness the driver of the ambulance leant down. gearing about for help, shouting in rench for stretcher bearers to deal with the load of wounded the veh- icle carried. Hall ran up and ana- wered quickly in English. "Yes, yes, we'll have them hero in half“ a minute-J’ then as he real- ollectcd himself, h rather stumbling French: "Pardon! Je ants American " "That's all rl can myself, an tl I'm an Amnri it's a relief to be all)? to speak English a bit." came answer from the ambulance driver, Cfllp and clear-cut. accom- panied an equally hicloive move- ment, w ‘ch brought a. slim Mu Fillin is pockets with bandages, lint. l ine and all the food he could collect, Hall spent the after- noon playing the Good Samaritan to this forlorn family. They were mod- eratcly safe in the cellars of the old village inn. moderately warm with flies made from the roken furni- ture collected by the two eldest, boys o eleven and ten. "An there's so little one can do really." Hall medicated. "'I'hi.s is Lust an mample of lt-Jiow can I elp that family? Even if I hadn't for my own job to attend to-Hul- oi Inolcs like a new convoy coming in. And we're full up already! no space even on the floor for another mattrem. He qulckened his steps as much The tenacious, chalky mud of ‘l o “WWI 8a the sticky mud and melted snow re down w the ground amongst the trampled clay and mud an blood of the roadway. "Goodi It's much easier for mo to explain. I'm temporarily in charge of the orderlics here and rn get the men at once." Bali was ust turning away when the driver uteri-opted him peremptoril . "Wall Don't o till you ve said how-do-you-do. 0u're Wilson Hall; I knew your voice at once." "And you—you are-W‘ Hall 6WD- ped to peer shortsightedly thr l1 he driving mist of rein. "Li!!!" t o be Continued) LONDON-Described by the mall- lstrate as "a dangerous animal." a man was sentenced to t2 months‘ hard labor. He drove while drunk. would allow. as half a doren motor ambulances cluttered across ‘he opening of the lane down which bl assaulted a motorist and D0150!- man. stole a car and 8'1 cues of ‘I8!