i . Fixtures if. A. MoDONALD. 45k 3 gsrswanr s. LOWTHER ~ the stock in trade or fixtures may ii.‘ w. JliiiliSTlill "(Prohibition Commission . infractions-of PROHIBITION ACT J “to the above or to J. JQTrainor. specter for Kings, Montague. $GEORGE J. ARMSTRONG . Charlottetown, __ Inspector, Sumnrerside, or to W. E. ., Haywood. inspector for _-j___ rs rwo :5‘ i ' I in I Mo“ one‘ .4.“ s. :iTENDERS Separate tenders will be received i ; for the following assets of the estate of Leigh P. McWiiilams, 0'Leary, - » Bankrupt. Stock in trade. including chairs and tables, biscuit rack and soft drink containers. Tenders will close on September l5th. Anyone wishing to inspect make arrangements with the under- . signed. A. ll. MCINNIS. .. Trustee in Bankruptcy. B560-9—'f-niwt-3i TENDERS Tenders will be received for the following assets of the estate of An- drew E. Doucette, Rusticoville, Bankrupt. Stock in trade. t_ Tenders will close on September i 10th. Anyone wishing to inspect the v stock in trade may make arrange- ments with the undersigned. A. R. lilClNNlS, Trustee in Bankruptcy. 8560-9-7-mwt-3i V An Annual Examination of Your Eyes will Safeguard Yell‘ Vision and Comfort s" ...;<.r.c‘- Optometriss I57 Kent Street Charlottetown iPrnfessional Bards d. ‘on. .|. n. AYERS DENTIST Dflice v Queen Street ‘ Over Hughes Drugstore. lloursz-S to 12.30. z P. iif.-5 r. M. = 8502-94-21. - Chairman MK. GEORGE E. BROWN Margate, P. E. l. Send all information regarding ommissioner, Provincial Police, or to C. A. Miller, Queens, “Ulll-IIOIIOMIWII, or J. W. Platis, ln- ARCHITECT 145 Great George Street 620-7-22-mwflmo. _ McDONALD 8: McPi-IEE . A. n. F. McPllEE Barristers. Attorneys, Eto. MONEY TO LOAN Riley Building “‘ fl3i-s-zu-imo-daily J. D. STEWART, K. C. N. w. LOWTHEB BABBISFERS. SOLICITORS, ETC. 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN. ri-s M11. 15s- vr-i fig“ I She: We'd better forget that WI ever met. - He: How can l‘! it's cost mt a few hundred dolwrs since i mel you. Mr. Henpeok: They always speak of the blushing bride. Mrs.Henpeck: Nowonder. When you consider the husbands most brides get, you can't wonder at them blushing. ' VAlN REGRETS The sumer outing catalogue, We sadly turn its pages And wish when things were coming good That we had saved our wages. De Critic: That snowstorm plc~ lure you painted last winter was wonderfully realistic. De Dauber: it must have been. A fellow got into my studio one day in my absence, looked at tbs picture and unconsciously put on my fur overcoat before he went i Worm: I hear you were on f feguiar toot last night. Bus: You, I was. I slept in ( on an automobile horn. better days?“ "My poor man, you have seen -_.__-i.__._ Did she know that I had lust liv- ed through the pure, magnificent experience of that view across the valley, as she must have lived through it two days before? Did she know that I had safely passed the summit and was coming down the long path of adventure? . . . 1 suddenly pulled myself up, cursed myself for a sentimental, egotistic- al young fool, and slapped to action o lugging burro. CHAPTER HI “I fold you-too much folks!“ grunted Buck as he loosened the clinches of his weary horse; I paid no attention; Buck had been re- peating that phrase like the re- sponse of a litany ever since we crossed the path and threaded the‘ more intensive traffic rushing inio| Cottonwood. i As I rubbed down my little roan] with the dry part of a gunny sack , which Buck had rescued from the‘ mud I asked humbly: “Whats the program?" “Git a regular suppper of ham an’ eggs from a sure enough ‘ restaurant," said Buck. “Guess it's comin‘ to us. An‘ find the lay of the land. Don't look good. Too much folks." “What are we going io do about the outfit?" I askfid. "Leave it here," said Buck. "Unguarded?" I inquired. a man quicker fur sneakin’ things out of a public corral than fur like this" he said. When we had watered at the pool had judiciously distributed the last of our oats among the whole train, when we had blanketed our horses with tarpaullns from the pack, my I impatient young feet were free to I follow Buck's down the full-flow- ing street. It quivered with excite- ment, chatter, good humor. A two- story building swung its doors wide open to the street. Ii: revealed a rough room, the walls covered with newspapers. Along the whole far- ther side ran a bar. It took a mom- ent of inspection to tell that; the first glimpse showed only s long row of men, leaning on their elbows. their stalwart backs hunched, their stretched coat tails revealing their scabbarded sidearms. Nearer stood three tables fringed with card play- ers, piled with gold pieces and buckskin sacks; about the players watched a silent, intent. border of spectators. Over all shone the brilliant light of one big kero- sene lamp, backed by a. reflector and the soft, uncertain twinkling of candles, set row on row into boards. A crowd was incessantly climbing one side of the room. And from a- bove I caught a voice bowling: “Place your bets gents!" and the unmistakeable whlrr of a. roulette wheel. BITES Insect, snake, or animal . o the bu: Instnsont is plan? of Dillard's at ones. t sootiiol. is and cleanses. Draws out tho poison I 8° {WI mo | MEALS n ALI. nouns “Sure," said Buck. "They'd lynch’ stealing a. horse-in a new camp, of an unpolluted brook, when we| standing I and descending the rough stairs to W Vegetizbles ,Will: i .~i'_ 1 DIN" A long, low shack next doc;- m. ilted the tinkle of two guitars and a violin, a little hazy on their tunes but sure of their cadences. Its two windows emitted an exceptional blaze of lightrwlthin, lsdiu in very short skirts were whirling clump- lng partners in s. waltz, and men were dancing in pairs. The door of this establishment, also, opened as I passed; I glimpsed a lady of whom my first impression was a knee- hlsh skirt and a pair of red stock- ings, my second that she wore many frizzos and no makeup. She was holding the lapels of a fat man who rolled a little uncertalnly on his feet; and I caught her words: “Just one l1'l gold watch for-J’ The slamming of the door cut out the rest. o In a narrow ailev running dark- ly up the hill were indications of even lower diversions. A very modest shack, in the light. of ‘blazing’ windows across the street, bore the sign, "Assay Of- fice." The building next mostpre- tentious to the two-story building which we had passed on our first entry to the street, turned out to be o general store. It was open such doing a b‘ 1:24 l... six-less. Farther down ‘ the street n i“: -rn swung from o’ ‘p010 b1 for: n i i.:, illuminating tin. ‘sign. GOLDEN Eli-LE RFFEAURANT i As we edged through the crowd toward mt.- oiqective; Bus‘: being ,very hungry o .d low in spirits. vole rd his pwsizoism. "Startnr for a. gold camp six months alfcr the fall disccvvry sn‘ |n go nwsun," h". ma. "was v0.1 tho fool or was I?" I had been feeling muck. the same thing. though with a ies: poignant diSilDflOpllllllRut. ever sin"! \ve came out into Main street. Pwfessedly the rrsh across the peaks was far ‘gold. Unless all the claims had been staked, all the possibilities ex- ‘nausied, why were people running shops, dives, concert halls, gamb- en old-fashioned fringe o.‘ camp followers greater than the army itself. Along with king natures came slave-natures. Even at the first flush of discov- ery there were always men willing to sell their services for plain dig- ging at four or five dollars a day. Where they got the imagination to come at all I never could see. lThere were others, again, who really had the gold fever, who failed at the first rush, and who-immediate- 1y settled back to their pro-destin- ed places in society. 1 have lived long enough to sec the end of most careers which sprout- ed atcottonwood. Those who took fortunes out of the earth in the days when the Rockies suddenly blossomed with new camps-where are they now? One died in his mid- dle sge in Alaska, a common mush- i er on the Klondike trail: one in s. cottage in the East, supported by the relatives who had lived‘ hectic- see you transfer your valuable pat- od month after the luring rush this sarcasm he dropped his voice ally on his bounty in the days of his strike: one in the Denver poor- ‘ in in a bowl of golden Rice Krispies and. Foliiyiwn oars will tell you ‘Fwgirunohy every toasted _b ‘is. So orislftiiey _ iy crackle out loudi ti" Rico Krispies are deli- cious ‘ for breakfast, lunch, bedtime snacks. Great for kiddies. At your grooerfi. Made by Kellogg in London, KRISPIES came across the peaks not with rock- er and shovel but with merchandise. One fortune that I know of sprang from p. livery stable, one from a hardware shop, one from a pawn- shop; and one bad its true begin- ning in a trsy of cheap jewelry and ' vsmished watches carried into Cot- , tonwood by a wandering and ad-i venturous young Jew. Andrew Car- negie, I have heard, said, "pion- , eerlng don't pay.” It does not-in' any coin which Carnegie would have recognized. However, Buck and I are in a big , log cabin, the fresh mountain airs, blowing through a chink of the mud ‘ daubed into the cracks. Buck, with a "woof" of animal satisfaction, set- tled down to the bench, and ad- dressed the waiter. |"Whst I want is eggs," he said. "Ham and eggs." The waiter balanced his string of tin plates along his arm. "Why. how-de-do, Commodore Vanderbilt!" he said. "Pleased to ronage from the Astor house!" hav- ing dellvered himself in falsetto of to its natural note. “The last egg ln this here camp,‘ 'sald he, "was et at six bits apiece yesterday, What you'll git is venison steak. canned corn and coffee." The waiter stopped to collect from the rest of the guests, now finished and going: then sssemb led our tin plates of venison along his arm, hooked the handles of two tin coffee cups into the fingers of “"3 4W5? I h"! Yet 3° 1"!" the his spare hand and returned with —Cigaret ashes caused law ohmlfllns 68111115 M"! 801d an expert professional swing. He mobile accident here. The wind blew "w-"s- whim is 315° m” 1"’ °1 m9- slammed our provender before us, them from Motorist Ralph Vaugh- Ydl" Edvame °n B strike W" like picked half a loaf of bread from en's cigaret into his eyes, blinding army with a the debris at u» other end of the him temporarily. m; car n11; a pole. table, struck it once or twice on the edge by way of dusting it off, and deposited it, uncut, between our plates. "I kin give you a dob of nice, snow white butter for two bits extra," he said. That final lux- ury laid out, he settled himself be- side Buck, his elbows on the table, and when he resumed conversation he clove by accident near to the heart ‘of the matter. To Be Continued) I _____i_.__. asmM/ixeivs cannon NOW IN STATE MUSEUM Neb., Sept. tl-I-lark- lng back to the days when farm- ers were willing to lend an ear to anyone who professed power to P10 duco rain, a cannon is on display in the museum here. ..plus could reach those in need in ' f The Mt. Mellick Women's Insti- To the pioneer Nobraskan, this; cannon was known as the "raini B. Left T. R... ‘Qn [The Ground (Special to The Guardian) WOODSIOCK, 0nt., Sept l-In opinion of W. J. Fletcher, Secretary of the Woodstock Horticultural So- ciety, the surplus of vegetables is so great that in many cases they will be left to rot on the ground and potatoes will not even be dug. There has been an influx this season of truckers from countries to the south and southwest who have offered strong competition on the Wood- stock market. As far as the unemployed in Woodstock are concerned, Mr. Fletcher said most of them foresaw the present conditions and planted gardens, but it would be a xreat thing if some of the country's sur- tbe larger cities. ,- MT. MELIJCK WOMEN'S INSTITUTE i Ei/tlif‘ held their August meeting at the home of Miss Sarah MacDon- ald wlth ten members and five vls-. itors present. ' The president, Mrs. W. J. Mutch occupied the chair and the meeting opened by singing, "its a. Good Time to get Acquainted", followed by the Creed in unison. Roll call was responded to by a "Canadian Product and Where Manufactured" after which the minutes of the previous meeting were read and approved. A brief business period followed in which it wns decided among other things that dustbsne would be supplied for the school and that the sum of‘ $l,50 would be sent Mrs. Wyand and so endorse Dental Clynics. The sick Comm- ittee reported one sick call. All committees were re-eiected and bills presented and paid. A let- ter of thanks was read for assist- ance rcceived from the Institute. The collection amounted t0 61,25. Mrs. John MacRae gave a splen- did report o‘! the Annual Conven- tion, after which a very instruc- tivo address on “Child Welfare" W83 Biven by Miss Freda. _Melllsh of Boston. A hearty vote of thanks was tendered Miss Mellish and Mrs- MaoRse, after which Mrs. W. H. Wood kindly invited the next meeting to her home, to- pic to be, "Our District". __ Lunch was served by the hostess and the meeting closed by singing the National Anthem. cleaner‘ ssnss cause crmsn nnwrpn, Mass, sept. a. . P.) an auto- producs rain. maker." By firing it into the sir. its owner told settlers, he could Supervisors contracted with the 18-22 Canterbury Street, l» . dupar/zcioroaiynr, RADIO ISHERE It's the news of the day . . . The new Lyrp, _ with its marvellous modern refinements am} magical power! For all the now models an; balanced super-heterodynes . . . which means they have the most sensitive . . . selective circuit knovwni The new Lyric gets distance. Hos ulllbquallgd tone. Perfect volume control, pentode and screen grid tubes. True one-dial, spot-light tuning. Beautiful walnut cabinets. To-day your nearest Lyric dealer is demon- strating these fine new radios. Sec them . . , hear them. You’il say you never dreamt radio could oiler guch amazing improvements! l‘_9'.‘..’l"‘l‘4°'9.9"!“°-I9l°'"° c. a. MONROE LIMITED. "‘ Saint John, N. l5. $75.00 $95.50 $122.50 8155.00 $215.00 Complete with tubes. ‘. wen. EDI SON Linen ca Gonna! Electric Vagabond: every Tauday erm- ingemCanodo-wids ufworb. ..-i4____. I HA1 DA LAM PS WHEN you choose Edison Mazda Lamps you are assured full value of the current consumed-and these dependable lamps cost little more than the cheapest. Buy them by the carton would-be wizard. Ilioi-‘days his little and fill those empty sockets now. M|NARD'S Qfinv» LINIMENT MR. AND MRS. new! wan ‘me - oer Yovk MUDDY rAws OFF MY Slum-l , Mr J house. ‘Those descend ‘ in the second generation of mining camp fortunes who in this day struggle for the illusions of social position as their grandfathers struggled for realities. derive from men who cannon boomed sway into a cloud- less sky. No rain come. Then, when his board and room rent became pressing, the rainmaker disappear- ed, leaving his cannon for the mu- scum. Joe VMeets Aunt Ella Excuse no -— lh Arm» MY ooomwr HAVE smtluo You. in Amr ans. ‘P ‘s m‘ ‘m!’ norm’ ALL. war IS -Yss! i MARK R.MGUIGAN at". B c iisnnismna, sosicrroa, are. MONEY TO LOAN ~ bflGIl-Ill Block. Char‘ ttetowmililhi. CANADA L-si CANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC co. LIMITED By BRIGG ewe ‘me NICE. m: your raw, Hrrcuilii l-lil ALREAW HAS-—' BoTii 0F ‘THEM , voun cunn ,, iiot Stupid- " i‘ BELL & MATHIESON ‘B. ILBQII.‘ D. L. Mu hieson, LL. B. .‘ Barrister h Solicitors ‘ Money to Loan Charlottetown and Montague I i McLEOD & BENTLEY l. A. BENTLEY W. K BENTLEY, K. O- - , Ian-isterandAttorney-st-Law " - Officer 180 Richmond Street MUNEY To LOAN and Hercules _ Her Dog The seeming stupidity of - "V m‘ many school children. is ORAN-r ELLA! 8° Gus-E‘ s“ 70V! directly chargeable to faulty vision. ‘ v Correctly fitted glasses often work wonders. “Z,';Z.’.‘I.‘L'...?.'.‘l'..'“l|liii' ii. F. llilTiiilESliN F. Gordon Hutcheson Optometrists-At your service. C. M. Lampoon 6i Co. Lnnrsn . e4 Queen slim '_ London, I. C. ‘t. Inland Pubhc Augltion Sales ' lAW FUR! Shipping bus will be furnish- ' ed without charge by sppiyhu t.“ B. ‘i’. Holman. Ltd. Sam- ’ assrslde, I. l. l. l ted b! Alfred Fraser, inc; Ill Ilftb Avenue New York, N. I.