i i i a a e -'v we? qii-dvéibvow-t-w avvvwardyb‘ i i i it'd! passion-crown narvmo ram sun novmcm. ex- ummou. sssocm-rlou The ‘Annual General Meeting of the above Association will be held in thiioiflco of the Secretary, Boom ‘l. o; Wednesday, January 8th, 1950, at the hour of 2.80 ll. m. Dated this 28th day of Deeembe . A. 1)., 1929. " ‘ By Order, J. W. BOULTEB, Secretary. .e_ '-.i\\' sM-Momwed-Zl. WFOR SALE, An excellent dairy farm in Me: ' ‘mild. Lot 4s, 1 miles from Charlotte~ town, near churches, schools and rail- wafiitatioo, containing 185 acres, 125 under cultivation, balance wood and good timber, extra well. fenced and swatfied, tine buildings. Telephone in w spection invited. Uwing to ill- health, bargain for quick sale. JOSEPH POWER, j Siblii-“S-i-tufr-tf. MCI-mild. i§pcn0Nhu£ OF WESTERN HORSES There will be sold by Public Auc-‘ tion. Twenty Western liorses at 1.1 Parker A. Home's Barn, Elm Avenue. ~ on Friday. January 3rd, one thirty - . ‘ o'clock P. M. There are u number of .2 choice brood mares and gelding: well .‘ .. broken. Do not fsil to obtain one or 2.‘. Pnlorewhile the going is good. Term; Cash or thre months on ap~ r11 proved joint notes. " " J. A. MCDONALD, Auctioneer. l02-i2-30-3i. F luszoa .,_- ~fpxcHANGE s: i 8M acre dairy ranch in Manitoba .Claar. 2% miles from R. LL, Stores, etc. 1% miles from school. 125 miles hon Winnipeg. Near Portage La Pfifle. Want farm m P. E. 1. Might i assume some. Write particulars to ‘ H. COUGHLIN, 8129 W. 17th Ave, Spokane, Wash. haBANKRUPTOY IN BE ESTATE A. ROLAND MMDONALD AUTHORIZED ASSIGNOB Y. “ leiled tenders will be received by __ the undersigned on the stock in trade , . "iieunflsting of Groceri, Hardware, Boots and Shoes, Dry Goods, Drugs, " and Household Furniture, now in store and dwelling at Eldon, l’. E. 1., ao- " ‘edrdlng to inventory to be seen- at ' iiléwsm or The Rogers Hardware Company, Limited. Parties tender- - ving may bid on all or by departments. Tenders to close at noon on January ~ “thirteenth m‘? . ‘ BENJAMIN ROGERS, ala u a an en. “It's wiae to pick up a pin that's laying on the floor, but it it's a roiling pin it's wiser to dodge it." "Did you give him the air?" "Well, i told him to go get in his plane and fly away." "What broke Smith down so and =caused his death?" . "The heavy life Insurance he ear- rled." "Matches, you know, are made in heaven." "Yea, but don‘! you think most of them are aet off down here?" I O O I O THE CITY GIRL She was ahy when ahe went away Two months ago precisely: But kisses new, I have to say, Real nicely. She was shy for a city miss; l look at it aatutely And wonder how ahe learned to kiss So cuteiy. _ But ahe is not inclined to tell, And I can oniyiwonder. How do girls learn to kiss so well‘! ‘any other girl in town; she gave the 'first lawn tea ever held in Clear- drive s. car (Ford) as well as any- had twice taken the leading girl part THEY HAD TO SEE PARIS By Homer Croy Tuckett Declares? Dividend And Bonus _i.._ I i - n"| 1| édtiiieiirs two peigoent on the a to the. regular quarterly Opal, dressed in her-best, came in- to the kit-che - Although she wasn't a member of the Tuesday Afternoon Olub, her mother had so arranged it. that she wss to attend. Opal had helped pare the potatoes, and shell the beans, and that was all. Mrs. Peters loved Opal so much that she did not want her to do the work; she would‘ raher do it. herself. "I don-t want her to have to slave her life sway in a kitchen," she said. Mrs. Peter's dream was that Opal would make s. marriage in which she would not have to do such work. Opal was a tall, goocblooking girl, with soft, wavy, brown hair and as she enter- cd she made a very pleasant picture indeed. She was twenty-seven. Opal gave more mah Jong parties, more fudge parties, more slumber parties, more cross-word-puzzlcs parties than water had once been “Miss Clear- water” in a. state contest, could body, could swim Little Fox River. play tennis, was considered an un- usually fine dancer. had studied french in the Clearwatcr high school, in the mock trial at the court-house | belonged to the Jolly Sixtteen Club, ~ was a member of the Sigma Sigma i something, which was a Greek-letter ; secret society at the state university 4 where she had gone for a year, and I iyet for some reason or other she ‘had ' never got, off, as some of the more jealous neighbors said. She was popu- lar. sparkling, sometimes even witty, and yet the Fairy Prince hadn't come r riding by. I “I wonder what's the matter with ‘ daddy," said Opel. "He hasn't been so late in weeks," returned her mother. "And he knows that l have to gel. away early. Let me see how you look, dear." Bending far over, she washed her hands at the sink, then turned to Opal. Mrs. Peters odiusted e few things. u a mother always will, and was satisfied. “I don't. want to get all perspirlng," said lidirs. Peters as she looked at her- self in the cracked mirror over the sink. “l do wish hen come. Maybe you‘d better telephone." Mrs, Peters was forty-seven, but no one would have ever guessed it. Some- times strangers to Clesrwsiler mis- took her and Opal for sisters. The strangers usually got. an invitation to dinner. lvlrs. Peters had been born in Okla- homa. and had lived there all her‘ life. she felt that ‘Eliecame from a. i family superior ‘to her husbands but. this was not true at all. l-ier father had been, at sonic dim and distant time, s. member of the states first: ’ judicial commission. It was the iow- i est and hiunblest Job that one could 1 have in connection with the state government, but it carried with it a i very nice expense account and was ‘ man who could make impressive speeches on a few minutes’ notice. That was one thing that Mrs. Peters .v,i_,_‘ h. I I wonder. V, . , ~ Professional Cards FARM Fun SALE "c" g§;;';=.;*",';,,§,~;§Y,§;_"* °' Mo? ..,.,,DE_LL t? MATHIESON . B. B. BELL [H n, L MATIIIESON. u. s. g “Barristers. Solicitors, Etc. a f“ Money to Man. ' [Ildioea-Charlottetown and Montague ____ lrit . f- 0 j’ ark R. lilciiuigan, B. A. ‘ naansrau. SOLIOITOB. no. . .--. .- ~ slonsv r0 LOAN Minnow Block, c lottstowl, 23.1. "iMcLeod & Bentley . V‘ l. A. BENTLEY .. ' W. B. BINTLEX, K. U. Banister and Attorney-at-Law ~e .,., u‘ - f“ ‘It ‘£1 .001“: m mehmoho Street IIONI! T0 LOAN Charlottetown, l’. B. I. McDonald 8; McPhee 44. __ ‘iilvr i‘ . I I . I. A. HeDONALD. n. r. luernea Iallisnas. ‘ATTORNEYS. no " " IONI! ro l-UAN lb) Iitdina Uhartettetowa ......__.___....__.._,...,_ Stewart. & Lowther x"”‘“ an s-rawaarnt-o ' ,, I, LOWTIII Illli as. souclroas. no ‘ lftlrdat tieerls sum m was I am offering for sale my far-m fltmllosed of 80 acres of land in high state of cultivation, about 60 acres Mrs. F. C. ‘Belyea Suffered With a Very Lame Back Brown's Flats, N. B., Dec. 3i.- <SpeciaD~Another tribute to the flelffll- "St in lumber and hard and 50ft. wood situated at West River Bridge where all iihipplng may be conducted" Excellent transportation facilities with almost daily boat service to Charlottetown. Splqsdld potato fann, well drained, level and free from stone. Near churches, school and public Ilalls. Splendid new and completely finished dwell- ing house with telephone, large potato and _ I warehouse and outbuildings all new...Farn1 foots West River. source of shell mud supply, and excellent oyster and smelt fisheries affording side revenue, also near sea manures on Strait of North- umberland. I For further particulars apply to ' w. n. snaw. Department of Agriculture Charlottetown. 814-1241-3-6. great work Dodds Kidney Pills are , doing for the women of Canada comes i from Mrs. Fred C. Belyea. a well known resident of this place. She I wrltes:-~“I used D0dd's Kidney Pills for my back which was so lame I could hardly get around the house or do my work. I got some Budd's Kid- ney Pills and after the first few doses I noticed a difference. I kept on tak- ing them and when I had taken two boxes, I was quite well once again." Other suflerers of Backache tell of pains relieved and health restored through the use of Budd's Kidney Pills. They act directly on the irid- neys. They strengthen the kidneys and put them in shape to strain the uric acid out of ‘the blood. ' They do one thing only, but they do that. one thing well. Norwegian America Line '§O@M>§.O4i§O ‘CO4 1 POTATOES T _AbE>TURNHB Wewlllaebsyiagevsrv layateoa warehouse. Hogan's Wheel. highest latices fer-seed stash Aeeemaodaq ties for lsat bah. lfrllltlll IIOUGMI. Charlottetown, s. s mm. use rinses til sac ' ..._;AVA\“'. .. uee-ee-eooeevoeoo-o w» . V. a! ' v , M eeeoe , . y iiALlFAX to NORWAY l!) the Fast Popular S. S. Stavangerfjord Sailing l0 A. ll. NOV. {I Direct to IIIGIN and OSLO Passengers booked through to Norwegian. jwsdkh and ilaailh i lldllil. ‘ freight and pennies: rates en sa- 'r. ‘A. l.‘ oswocrs a sole f mum-los- OOOOOOWQOQOOOOOOOOQOQOQ .s ort of aniimpoession he ‘made on ,ha»d more money than the‘ Peisrses much sought after by elderly gentie- i ovum ofodo perclit with Janus-r? 10.1000. no .-l-h;msf.nrq_t change in the company's ‘condition dividend payments since m1; bonus now forecasts total payments.- of six per cent of the pa: vdliii or thesiockinlllso. The company reports sales slrpabtng all previous’ and regards the outlook for lflttas " promising. Advertising -and<~sa.ies - effort will be steadily lncreasedour- lng the coming _ , i ‘C. never go over~the fact. thtt her fath- er had once been attachedgtojhs state government of Oklahoma and that the neighbors hm caifefhim Judge. when Mrs. Peters bad""lfom- puny, especially guests ‘whom _shc"did\' not feel thoroughly _ qua-inted with, she found many ionsjo refer in passing to her father, Judge; but the reference was so slight; and so hurried that it was hardly, noticed at the time. _ » f ‘ ' Mrs. Peters also based her feeling of superiority over her husband on the fact. that she used much Better grammar than Pike did and could handle works that Pike madeabotch - of. On the table at the headlofiher bed was a book entitled 18,000 Words Often mspronounoedflsomctimesjhe wrote to the iexiofltrhhhefs chair in The Literary Digest, asking mints in gramme: and usage-Plkcthought a legicographer was somebody ,_ who made geographies. The plaixrfact of it was that. Pike didn't. carenlhal. people or how he dressed, or whom he rssoclaied with, just so hLs business increasedea-ch year.~It caused Mrsw Peters no end of won-y. Sometimes she felt that it stood in Opal-sway. And‘ yet ,Mrs. Peters‘ would 'cook' dinner in a. hot, stuffykltclien‘ on' the day of ‘the biggest malfunction’ of her 1m. ' ~ " :[ Mrs. Peters did her ‘owncookinl. except sometimes when the "Business". as she always referred-to lwwas un- usually good, when, for aubrlertime she would have a hind girhss Pike called her. The fact that ahe haddn do her own cooking,‘ except spasmodi- csily, did not worry Mrs Peters, per- ticulariy es 1t was done by weoiic- aily all the wives oi’ Ci alter, ex- cept the two or5three faimiilies who and dldnwsecm to cardihowithey threw it about. ‘ \ ~ Sometimes Mrs. Peters tell-In in- tense yearning ‘to get oweiy. from clearwaiter because she felt that it was ' too small. Now and then she had talked to Pike of going to Oklahoma City or, in Tulsa where opportunitiesfas-shc expressed it, would be greater; but nothing had come of it.~~ , . ' ‘Iherc was a step on the porch. "Maybe that's your father-now," said Mrs. Peters. _ But it was only one of the-neigh- bors, who hnd "run in" for a. mome .. “There's quite a bit of excifcm idowntown," she said. "Theyfrebring- y ‘in: up my sI-nd on theMasilinizi tract!" ‘.. , - ‘ She referred-to a reeentiflur, . _. oil prospecting going on in the‘ ' V‘ ty and which was being watchul; h. mild interest for fthe reason '0; Clearwater district had, ; scene of one of the first oil d fies in Oklahoma, but it hm tameqyéut m be a shallow field. rhehthilvglah‘. discoveries of the Cushing {Pooiithc Okmulgee field, the Osaigeiwelis and others had completely overshadowed it. m mt, the shallow oil sine 1nd soon been drained. In other parts-oi _ Oklahoma and Texas great floods ‘of greasy, brown-black ' peiroieunihhad spouted up, making strange and"un;-~ expected millionaires overnigh ' amazed, incredulous‘, bewildered‘ y ple. And what hiltoris they hadh d' There was Bob Browmwho had farm-- ed for thirty years and still had borrow -l.0 peynhis taxes; and, hen the land hehad cursed a tiroufand times suddenly belched up l fountain‘ b: black gold Hid Bob had become ,9; millionaire before the corn silk new dried lip. But Bob couldn't‘. figure fir‘ millions; they were too utterly be? yond his stub lead-pencil. He rented the crop rights of the falthiurold farm, moved to tow-n, and let the oil’ belch. A new town hall was boon started andLhelp was short because everybody wanted to be a driilsrjl lease writerfor a prospector. and Bolt‘ got a job following the carpenters- around and picking up neiisat eight m. There was n0 end to auch swlis; every town had them and they bu. true-the a: . uhbelievlhlc romance t follows in wakaof with m upsetting of orders. f ,. . ’ ‘ wild tales him-i... _ worked not. suu,‘ m .01..“ womb i130 Nltl , “ 105m dollars a day It sure beaffarm- i‘ fig$50.00-tovthe Personlwhocouiita ‘ ‘ them correctly - Other awards a from $20.00 down »_- __/ - ,,;;_ . . i‘ _ _ I _-_,_-_;'_-_§‘T¢iq‘.§s'~f_- -_..§. ___ __ . __ -/ _ - ' _: _ .-- _i- - --'_',_. _ -§~\\ Q ¢~"/=~ ‘j r ‘s "P;=-1'V"""‘%—~ ax} ‘ The {eathers on the Turkey are" made up o! tlgurI 1,4, l, 5:1 and the Turin! H11 Mid the figures. iThe total cloths added ltltlillsz-Iibr the correct, or nearest correct, gqlgtlon prizes in order as follows will be paid in cash.‘ ,' ‘ ‘ ' a A a sins probleniis u tale theaefeatllera oil lllilfll will‘ be taken aa thenuniber of feathers on thb bird. , M V Conditions 1* Every one in any famtiywhers there is a regular subscrip- ‘lat Prize............ $50.00 5th ‘v.0... _ _2nd rm .2000 0th Prise .000 ~00» 0! this new r114 in advmee. u invited u: try the 8rd Prize .1000 7th .100 ""19"" ""1 "mm" m’ “Pm”- ..s.00 1,00‘ ~ 4th" Prize .‘....... midnight. rr costs", lvorniivio , _ There is absolutely no responsibility, obligation or cost of anykind to try for a prize. provides few hours most interestfngwork. CQMPETITIlQN. clears ‘The competition closes-Saturday, ‘January g5, 1930' ‘l, All §olutions to be considered, must reach the I "address below before that hour. ' m case of a tie the prieewill ..1 to h. one who had mt; . a new subscription with his solution in accordance. with condition No. 3. amongsuch proportionately winners. ‘ if those "who tie have both, or all sent in new Iubscrip- , $10M; thenthe prize will go to the one whose slibscrlptlmfon ' which he or she became eligible, ls-pald the farthereat in advance into the year 1030. ..1.f both» or all-are‘ paidin ad- ' vslm to December =1. 191w. i-ilenihb. money. will he canoes» , according to the ammberyiot .'¢1.='i'ihii,=éui<=n To Turkey Feathers Competition (a) lily solution 0f tile Feathers on the Turkey l: ~10) 1's]; eligible for the competitio‘ on the s. Name ......................:...........'............ Address i‘ : ~ lei‘ ‘Amount enclosed on apcount of the above Subscription uh new Subscription. Aw°l3".t°“°‘°'°d‘ "-°° °' "-00 Pllllng ‘for-the em v..."n..iv...t __,, 1 ,boot.,..,....................' m0. I‘ ‘ NO!!! Sections (o) and (d) are for use only if subacri ption is - \ a n tith Prize . Cilia ‘solving of the t-liebvrderlines. nu in- mil-ii carlyl ‘ SOLUTION‘ TURKEY v-ricarnnns- compmrmou x F TlieGunrdinn. Charlottetown, p, a, 1, Name .. . » it’ ‘"14 "I" the dwlllw 0f the Judges can be lusisnuubis and final A , 2 hnyone not eligible in accordadce with no. 1 condition, may compete by becoming a subscriber or sending in the subscription of some member of the family with $4.00 (or problem Wm . country or $0.00 for the city for the first year in advance. /': ~ 8 rI-fvervvccmoetlior may." u he or mo.» desires, send 1h a . new_ paid in advance for one ysdr subscription with ma solution. This is not obligatory: but the winner s; each prize who does send. a new subscriber will be award“ double the amount his or her prliie calls for. Thin if the ' winner of the first prise had seat a new subscriber, he will be'_ awarded 0100.00 cash instead of 800.00, and accordingly with all the prises. No onecan so secure double money " unless the new subscription is actually forwarded with his so ution. ' , ~ "4 ‘Huh llfliflbeiitor. byilendihg in his solution, agrees this ‘m. decision of the 100m shall be indilputabla 1nd can, ' 5‘ Ailisolutions must be sent in on ihe-followin f rm ell - _ ‘pedfromthisifaper. i o '- p .' . _, . . ,_ ., I ‘ Mlrkyouvyouislde ofieotelope "I'm-key mothers Competition." ~ .iY.r . - ' nun-r-tr-lk-n.s.--.nn......~-.'---.---"..-.n..--... . lion addressed = , . r. I also e-a-heaionala-ea-I v . . . i _ Address .r\- _ Blanca .. Addresa illfimlll- 0r ifiiendiala inn new subscription. _‘ _ _ t I .