-~.~ -_.._. u, .,____ and , made no iiuuer ' the magazine. OF THREE Mary H1535‘! Bradley ysmooimooooomiamm. (Continued frons- Page s) of escape. She instantly with She gave up her committed herself ' room. she said good-bye to Marge I and hcr husband and the little j sroups she had known. There were ' hers. She went to iarewell luncheons and little din. theater and supper with Barney Mulford, who f became morose and rather tight at’ partins._and she went to cock- . unis as a filial gestum with Irving Provincial Exhibition AUGUST 14th t0 17th Season Tickets NOW 0N SALE AT ALL DRUG STORES AND OLD SPAIN FOR $3 Taxes Included’ BIGGEST ENTERTAINMENT VALUE , OF ALL TIME 4—- Afternoons Raeing—4 WITH 130 HORSES ENTERED FROM ALL PARTS OF THE MARITIMES. THE BEST AND FASTEST IN CANADA. ALL THE LEADING DRIVERS ' Vaudeville Program IS GUARANTEED TO BE THE BEST EVER OFFERED BY ANY FAIR IN THE MARI- TIMES. ACTS INCLUDE- THE ARLOFF TRIO xmxs Am cmcus poumxs-bmwcnrsrs-a wnrrn nnornrzns DON aren't-tinned MARION ma DIPPY nnzns THE 2 MIRTHS HANK rm: YD-IEL-LING RANGER rm; SKATING snaps THE VICTORY REVUE With Lillian Braidworih STAR TAP AND ACROBATIC DANCERS IAND OTHER FEATURES WITH IO-PIECE ORCHESTRA EVERY AFTERNOON ALL THESE STARS WILL BE SEEN ON THE BIG NEW STAGE BETWEEN HEATS OF THE RACES. Evening Shows WILL BE THE BEST OF ALL TIME. DON'T MISS THEM-A $2 SHOW FOR 35c plus lax. AFTERNOONS 75c Plus Tax SEASON TICKETS AT $3. tax included, are transferrable and admit by special entrance. nu set for the no weer a Provincial Exhibition Association LT. COL. D. A. MacKINNON, D.S.O., " President. J. W. BQULTER. Secretary-Treasurer. I Garrett, who looked at her hesl. ta-ntly and regretfully as i! she were s disease he had not rightly diagnosed. Her telegram to Ada Wag caro- fully phrased and timed: MAGuL ZINE JOB GONE NONE AVAIL- ABLE TAIQNG TRAIN TONIGHT. Sh, did not name the train: she did not want Ada to meet her. Explanations would be easier, she knew instinctively, at dinner with William present where his mas- culine caution would hold back his wife's too intimate questions. She managed it well; she called i her home from the station, arrived . just at dinner time and flung out her story in spurts of words. The I magazine “as cutting down-yes. ; her coming home for the funeral 1 hccn alone mid been a mistake_she’d looked about for something then wired the office here, for Mr. Kendall had said that day at luncheon when she'd met him and Mrs. Kendall, that if ever she wanted to mane back-- The dvcceptlon filled her with mlf-loaihing but she said stonily, "Don't be so squeamish, my girl! Thercil be much more of this be. fore you're through." She saw Ada and William glance at each other when Kendall wns named; there would have been some remonstrnnce from her sister. she was sure, it they had ‘Phat might come later. Kay said, "You know I'm lucky to ‘ have itflposiiiona aren't so easy , to 001m: by," and hoped Ada would lct that consideration check her. speech After all, she had nothing to be breathless anicl irigizlcned about. She was gOirig lo h." careful, She was going to be hams; - Eve was having her coffee alone . in the drawing room. Dick had not come home i0 dinner; he had , phoned that he had work to do l an would not be home ‘ Y might till late. wait up," he had said suggested, "Or you get some people in for "Don't and then ' , bridge," as if it were easy to find 1111 extra man for bridge at a mo- ment's notice. She had answered. “Perhaps I ._ casually and unrevealing. h. but hcr heart had turned to lead . in hrr v lt “was bcgiuning all ovci" again '=h-.~ had known it would: she had moivn it cvci" since that night a week ago WllCii Dick told her that Kay Hardv vsns bark in the office. "But I thought she was in New Yci'ic—" she lied begun and he rid with svch careful detachment that shc kncw it 11nd been thought nrl, "She wns, but there Wa n0 future in her work there And it n11; too far from hcr family. We're "rsrv glad in have her back ’ Evy» chain‘: doubt that But some- ilfuv. must hnvc liiilf-flPllffl between - ; {Hip/r two. siic ilinughi: somethin? ihw, had fiiflfir‘ Kay give up New ‘Work it ind hapucnrd nil-er that _ n?" nl"4‘illii',' at the University - > It exnsncrnlcd hcr to think on u-lrai thin inn-ads of chance that mrctlng had lteen strunE- If m" iyirrs had not come a lili- carlior. if SllC had not asked to iuur-h with them, if she ind nnt asked him to see if the uirl with Tracey Vcrnon was Nan- c3‘ Port-in he might never 111W knnllfl that Kai‘ has in town. He i-ri iirly lind not known it before- Fhc would novor forgot. his face wfvffl ht cums brick from spcaking in lzcr ll»: lcokcd like n boy aEflin- \ml ihru thc old unhaDPY 7°- 1n(“f'!".!'SS repossessed him and she Md fclé him charting silently - st the restraint he was under luncheon had been torture u or. The sight of Kay had been a 'J‘l"lll'O i0 her. She felt unmasked. 1n she nod armored herself a- , malt the thought that Kay Id not know the iruth. KW v 1n imagine that something hnd llllpllfllfll Those thoughts welre tiunncd in her all ihmuSh i e tun Sclulylcr luncheon. 5h:- wcnrlcrcd, Dilliiflg (WWII h“ fliifff‘ cup, u-iint Kay had said t0 Dick that nigh’- H" mind “cued 11-0.}, m,‘ sirnlu of uncertainties. If ‘Kay had spoken out, told Dick T i of licr dcccniion-but Eve did not A Vegetable-laxatives Belt POULTRY ii.- We are buying all kinds of live and dres- sed poultry. - Our killing plant is operating daily and we can assure you of prompt service and returns. It will pay you to get our prices before selling elsewhere. Island Cold Storage c009 , CHARLOTTETOWN, PEI. ll (Elillliil . EIIEIlQIEIIEIEIEIE-IJEIEIIIEEIIEIEI lfilfilfillillfliiil-I Iifgjg-DEEZQQQQEJQQEEEE Ell 1' ‘F: li- believe that my lwd dime m" The" would hfivg D603 an flltér. k. mifwi; gltmlamlliar fear, this fen er lhan Salts ur Mineral Oil? .11.‘. n; rm it apt to leave the tract greasy. When you “M! 9R» llAllllll‘0l\"S PILLS your “New is relieved of much flflll WM"- Thls holps in cleanse the blood of many impurities. To have clear. ruddy akin. to look and feel well, to digest ynnr meals better and b0 nhvays at your best let DR. HAM- itrorrs PILLS hep you — mild and effective they do not cause any inconvenience. 25c at all dell- r-ra. For Foot Ailments CONSULT n. .1. a. nnuwn, m». Orthopedic lllllllflPllill-ST III Great George Smut CHARLOTTETOWN. P.I.I. ran cnannorrmowu onsnmau an immeuistel . “m.” uoer null so,» RO healthy. 50¢ I hastens NE" iii‘:- ‘ INOIAID MON TAGUE __.__ Olllll hen. orTuiI-“gii m“ w“ . %l. Hill-h POWer and Barby Mao- Montsguo sf- gnagltandlizng. Air Cadet Camp at M"- J- H- Insraham, Roohesier, Ms. is visiting in Montague, Quest o! her brother, Mr. Hubert. Nelson. and Mrs. Nelson. Min mil-lei Johnstons. New in‘??? fileigt. o! fit her vacation er e and w. s. Johngtgfi", M’ Miss Avis Schmder returned to her home in Everett, Mass, after spending some time in Montague. Mrs. Reg Arsenault and Olin dnflshter. Nancy, of PiCtOiLyNBfi went the weekend here. They were, wwmlllnied by Mrs. Arsen- glutlts brother, Ifieut. W. D. Stew- Mlse Jean Cam bell, R.N., of {he staff of the P. .I. Hospital, en- JOYBd u two weeks vacation at her home here. Miss Jennie Daley, Detroit, lVIiohiga-n, who is visiting her fat- her, Mr. Joseph Daley, Murray 322231;]. spelntta ‘fewMl ays in e. es o Hemphill. g 5s Mary Mr. and Mrs. David Gardiner and their children, Rhena and Lincoln, of Ottawa, were recent guests of Mrs. Gardiners mother, Mrs. J. A. Currie, Montague. Rev. Geo gc ‘iewart Lexington, Kentucky, is visiting his mother, Mrs. Edith Stewart, Montague. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Williams, Charlottetown, are visiting their daughter and son-in-law_ Mr. and Mrs. Bruce MacLean, Lower Mori- tague. Cpl. George Preece, Canadian Joint Staff Mission, Washington, D.C., is spending a leave at his home here. Mrs. Carrie Hopkins, of the staff of Kings County Hospital. return- ed to Montague after en oying a ‘month's vacation at her 0mg m Newfoundland. _C 0T Kai's sheathing out. Eve had known n. to inc iiill lll those days last lall when Kay was leaving, Ellen came in Lor the coimg WW. She was a pretty girl with a fairness that her crisp black and white set oii and now she was a litle flushed at an announce- ment that she lingered to make. 511s was going w be married, she told Eve. “Oh, Ellen!" There W55 frank dismay in Eve's imponse. She was fond of Ellen and depended on her. '1 shall miss you." “We're hoping you won't," Ellen answered. "Not for some time. If we can both kccp on working for you-—' "But, who is it, Ellen?" "It's the chauffeur, Mrs. Ken- dall. Chester Holden. It's been l matter of a year or more." Eve smiled at her. "I must have been quite blind, Ellen. Of course I hope you'll both stay on. I couldn't bear to lose you too soon. There's room for you, isn't there, in the chauffers quarters over the garage?" "Thais what we thought," said Ellen eagerly. "We haven't quite planned what will be the way of it, come winter, but we'll think of something." Ellen hesitated, looking away, her cheeks reddening. Eve knew that she was thinking of that other room down the hall of the town apartment, the room that had been Johnny's. "We'll work it out," d, and she said other things the while she thought. "l-low he she is. Life all beginning," and she hated the reminder of her own years. Florty years old. Ellen moved dlf with the coffee tray, her face bright as the silver upon it. Eve wondered when their mar- riage had fint begun to go wrong. She had been too content, herself. taking too much for granted, to know what signals Jiad been given her. Had she left him too much to himself? In what had she failed him? Insiinctiviely she knew that she had been very close to catas- trophe in those July days pre- ceding Johnnyg death. She knew that Dick had been on the brink of open desperate speech She could remember, still flinching, how hard she had worked at her own bright semblance of unconscious- ness of the fierce tension in him But that was past. Johnny had saved her from that. Johnny's loss would always save her She knew that with certeinty. Dick's own grief might grow dulled by time: he would shut it any in the secret places in his heart that s wise man tries not, to frequent but he would never free himself from the bonds of that psrent_ hood. we could always count on his outer loyalty. (To Be Continued) shosai _-.___....______._____ _______. .191 5 nensons why B-A ‘ means longer life, lower 1 It protects better. The first job of any motor oil is to lubricate . . . that is, protect moving parts against friction. Because it is refined from specially selected lubricating crudes, by the famous 5-point process which presence to the full its lubricating qualities, Peerless protects moving parts better! 2 ll heaps engines cleaner. Oils-all oils-have a natural tendency to oxidize under heat and pressure forming harmful deposits in the engine of your car. Peerless is specially protected against this tendency, therefore it keeps engines cleaner. ll Imps engines tool and efficient. Excessive heat is the enemy of efliciency in your car's engine. Peerless YES, ll_l_l__Q_l_E_§ wmnonvou use IN Yilllli PEERLESS MOTOR Oll. repair costs for your car —-a true “heart-cut" oil-has an exceptionally high V.l. (Viscosity Index) which means, among other things, that it keeps the right consistency for cooling, sealing and lubricating st all engine temperatures. 4 It shy: on the lob longer. Thousands of Canadian motorists, from fleet-owners to private drivers, testify that, with Peerless Motor Oil, they require less oil added between changes. 5 "It's Alley ." After B-A have refined the highest quality oil it is scientifically possible to make . . “it's llloyedl" That is to say u special ingredient is added which inhibits oxidation-principal cause of oil failure. Give your car Peerless Motor Oil today! 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