JULY_1Q. ‘i934 v W Literature ‘ vvwooowo-o-q “ ‘A ‘Ann THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN iv." 8 n", iii-urns}; w-F , . i - l»): _ ocial A and Personal Real -:- ooooo-oo-oo-o-oo-Ooaoooooooooc ==~¢¢ sew" Fails Lure . |_ A . W12] safer flom Daumfio Dorothy o! m“ suuaunu? - i Mothers Who Want Daughters to Marry for M-oney are not so Much Sordid as DISll- lusioned — Their Own Happiness Spoil- ed by Poverty, They Have Come to Regard Money as" the Only , Thing That Counts . A mother wants me to tell her how to keep her daughter from mer- l rying the poor young man with whom she is in love. There is nothini; ' the matter with the lad except his lack of money. He is moral and up- right and industrious, but the best he can give . his bride will be love in a two-by-four fiat and the work and anxieties and economies that go Lherewith. 4 AAQAAAA AAAAA How Cm Mother Warns Against lighted a group of Portland musk lovers with herlrendition of Tchai- kovskys reveille and other favorities 135011551118 human intelligence TUNT HIS PALS ASKED FOR ‘,' \ PARIS, July I4.—Gaston Rich- - lrd was getting old. For years he 7 had been known as the Human Dr. Davenport confessed she had Danna: Ball and-had. rmnde- his long been a victim of intimidation ‘living by being shot 1min accannon] but that today she was free of fear . Antone HQ. Hiifiiendraskied him to, for, as she explained, "I am the ",do "ii once moot-Just once. for! captain of my soul." ' h 1, apgcjg] mtg, The centenarian "l "I am old," said Gaston, "You pounds and rknow veg wellfifam 53." But’!!! befin $16k- ,‘._ time he yielded. They heard him‘ uhiuttering-as he climbed" into the‘ WOMANS PAGE . . ,. ._ gcannon. "It must be the last time." BROADCASTING =he was saying: “decfdely, it must." . _____ It was the last, He fell six inches! In the hushed. curtained tel-tort of the net and was killed. s ood alone -—?——-— A"d read my rhymes out to the - microphone. Yet scarce could I belicvc that every word I breathed. perhaps a listeners heard. Rather I felt like som behind , down-dropped curtain Q -'- shut out from his kind. , AVOID SUNBURN AFTER Deslieratc to make yet living lo"cd DRINKING ALCOHOL ones hear Some fond last mcssage that would make all clear --WilfrId Gibson, in the Obseiver - l NOXZEMR ends pain instantly. Used for years at Beach First-Aid Hospital: HERE'S really no excuse for sunburn . palm-because the instant you apply l Noxzema it takes all the hot smart: soreness away. lrcools and soothes-m I helps Nature mend the burned skin quickly. Noxzemais greaselesssrainlesr, - roo. Costs very little. Ger a jar at any , drug or department store. l NOXZ EMA GREASELESS——WIIL NOT STAIN p weighs 89 claims never t0 nave .- - .r-‘.5'-s'~'¢-IaQ-n"“, “I want to save my daughter from the liard life I have had." Sayb the mother. "I don't want her to have to spend he? Y°l1l~h slaving in a kitchen and walking babies and pinching pennies. I don't WB-Ilb her to have to go shabby and never to have a dress or 8 ‘hat that didn't come off the basement b81- gain counter, instead of the pretty things Sho craves. I don't want her to have to live a1- \vays in ugly cheap houses; eat cheap, moon food; go to cheap places of 11111115811161“; 11°11- sider the cneupncss of everything first until she gets cheap herself. room I ' ‘ rassuivoan sures nor SAILING rams! - 1-1; n‘ -= we w.» c."- ,, '4 MONTREAL, July l4 —or course .- Il-here is nothing to the old supersti-I jtion about bad luck attending ships, ‘VthB-t sail on Friday the ltith—butl _ fi-there were no passenger liners’ ' tputting cut, from Montreal» harbor‘, {last Frldly, which happened i to be‘ :the 13th. They feel the same way‘ -.-about it in, the old .country andl flno passenger ships sail on Friday ffor Canadian ports. ' ‘ fi thousand e poor ghost CHAMPION jam and jelly makers swear by the recipes found in the booklet under the label on every Certo bottle. With them you, too, can make jelly and jam of prize-winning quality, colour and flavour, in 1/3 the usual, time, And at less cost, in the bargain. Use Certo-follow the recipes exactly-and make perfect jam or jelly every time. In addition, use any fruit you like-fresh, canned or dried-or fruit: juice. i i C E R T O --Is fruir pectin. —-The natural jcllying substance ex- tracted from fruit. —g:lls the juice ghar would have iled away by the old (long-boil) method. -—Makes 50% less cost per —Saves flav l "My daughter is beautiful and attractive and I want her to make a brilliant marriage. I want her to marry a rich man who can give her every luxury, fine clothes and Jewels and houses and cars; who can take her on wonderful trips and save her from every care and hardship. Look at me. Old before my time. My complexion burned out over a gas range. My figure bent over a washtub. Worn out with hard lflbol‘. I want her to have ease and leisure and every 81b of the beauty 5l1°l> l" keep herself young and pretty. Look at my hands, knotted 811d Gallo!!!»- ed with work. I want her to be able to keep her hands soft and mani- cured. -.- a i vrvhf-lirk ,_. .- Don't get your sun-tan after con- suming buckwheat cakes or alcohol, advises Dr. Charles F‘. Pabst, chief ‘ dermatologist of st Brooklyn hos- pital, warning against the perils of the sun's rays. Here are the rules Dr. Pabst lays down or vacationistsr “Don't go out in the sun alter eating a generous breakfast of buckwheat cakes or drinking high- balls. Science has proved that such r substances as quinine. alcohol I buckwheat. iron and iodine, when‘ taken internally, render in indivi- dual extremely, sensitive to the sun's rays “Beware of scanty bathing attire, If one-half or more of the body surface is sunburned with the formation of blisters, serious illness and even death may result. Even a mild sunburn that causes ozly redness is extremely dangerous if i it affects the entiye skin surface. pi m b k d b “Don't sprinkle perfume or toilet . 11 UP e ac an urst into water on the skin before exposure mafiuggentc; come? film" ("l6 has; D1'Plly_ Curls, curls can be bought ‘to sunlight. This may produce a p e e can ml mall“ D7~lA5l°nl5h1l1§ lhal factory hair lslsevere inflammation of the skin Marie de Goiiere Davenport, 109-, able to play a comeback but here| called dermatitis" maxi? saigligga traveller and‘ ll l5 Rllrlélhli j Dr. Pabst added that going bare- AL m-e piano i YB.‘ For“ d l tel bA quaint effect is a topknot made‘ hooded in thc sun did not increase Dr Davenport ‘sh said S" flgh . y thc use of a narrow braid and the growth of but usually w"; C t P - k if} ,9!‘ a er sel/Cml PUlfS. YES. Duffs are puffin’ caused the hair to become brittle v oun asz o ,a lineal de- along. Very hczc They stay put and break off scendant of Tartar chieftains, de- bctter than ringlets. __ I _ ._ ._.- BEAUTY TIP This little tip for beauty's sake If the water at home is on the London WATCHES rtlziuovai. 0F QWN APPENDIX more jam or jolly at jar. 1/5 the time. Saves the fruit our. Saves the fruit colour. —Permirs (he use any fruit- fresh, canned or dried-or fruit juice. JAM POT COVERS MENIPI-IIS, Tenn.. July l4.-—I-Ier' ieyos fixed of a huge mirror, Evelyn McPherson, l5, who wants _ _ to be a doctor, lay on an operating '.'"‘_-" hi“ star?!" Put . it over m” . table and watched surgeons remove: w‘; lmnwdlaleli" fmng d°wn . her appendix a few days ago. She, mmly i? m" sldPs- when dTY- this told today of asking for a local, pan‘? Wm m‘? Parchment and. lnaesthetlc and a having surgeons‘ absmutfli’ gunfight‘ arrange the mirrors in the operat- Ing room so she could see them work. Evelyn plans to enter medical school when she finishes high school. To make excellent jam pot covers, dip round of greascproof pape int i“ “‘_ , r o "What if shc does imagine herself in love with a p001‘ 50y? Iti-‘Vel Huh! A dream that passes and from which you ivflko 11D Wllh a head‘ ache if you married a man who can't givc you even the ordinary @9111‘ forts of life and who makes of you nothing but a domestic Sofvnht With- out even a servant's wages. Not much romance in cooking and washih! and baby-tending and trying to make every dollar do the work of five, and living with a man who is grouchy and grumpy and hard to Eel 510115 Wlth because he is just as hard-driven as you are, poor thing. H11" 3'41" 4")’ i1"! or idly-making problems.’ I/ so, write lo fbe Con- ___________ run/er Service Department, General REGAL TOUCH GIVEN Foodr, Ltd, Cabourg, Ontario. BY "n?" COIFFURESI "I tell you that two years after marriage all husbands look alike, and then the only thing that counts is money and the things that money buys- The establishment. The social position. The pleasures and comforts- The freedom from anxiety of the future. Believe me, I knowwhat I am talking about, for I know all of the hardships of the poor mans wife, and that; is why I am trying so hard to keep my daughter from following 111 my footsteps. I want her to marry a rich man and have all I hove missed." Don't you love the new high cciffures? They're sort of regal looking. make a woman want to be quccnly If tresslocks aren't long enough '- INTELLIGENCE BEGINS 1 AT CENTURY MARK. V}! PORTTJAND, Me., July 14.~'I‘ruelto MADE IN CANADA It 15 the custom to goacl at these mothers “with their little horde of imaxims preaching down a. daughter's heart," es the Poof- Sflys. but Surely they are pathetic rather than sordid because they speak out ofhfuch bitter disillusion, and they are so frantically trying l0 save ‘he 9" - wh° are the very core of their hearts, from the hardships they have been through. l And just because these mothers have felt that Pol/Elly blighted their own marriages they have come to believe that plenty will insure the suc- cess of their daughters‘. But this is a mistake. One of the’ thihBs that money l5 powerless to buy is a happy marriage. A womans heart can ache just as intolerably undci" velvet as it can under homcspllh- She 01m be as homeless in a palace as if she had no roof to cover i101‘ honfi- she hard side. put a tablespoon oat- can Si, down every day at a banquet and yet starve for love and affec- mcal into a Small Square °f tion. She can spend hcr time rushing from place to place seeking Pleas‘ muslin. tie it round with tape, and lure and yet be bored to death. She can have everytliipg that money ca: put it into the bowl when you buy and yet, have nothing that feeds her soul or that br ngs her peace an wash. It will soften, cleanse and contentment, [give life to your skin. . ‘ The Million Dollar Doll ‘By C. N. £9’ A. M. Williamson FARM ron SALE l The undersigned will sell at Pub Auction on premises on Wcdnesda, _ mi-i Illustrated Dressmaking Lessons Furnished With Each Pattern For the things that make for happiness in marriage arc love n11: understanding and companionship and wngeniality and tenderness, 1m . if a woman gcts these, she is right and happy, no mmter how simply She has to live. no matter how hard she has to work, no matter how many Lifting the heavy scuttle as if it su WATCH "EM-LINE rprise, and B tt h 1d be w] : {were a. basket of flowers, iimpoured e y S Du d nothing, As a reward for this promise, he ._..A What do you blush to remember? foii .,_i' by; wt 81f. o? wi A! w! 2 nit ll! 5;‘. fr‘; my m b i" "l? i? ! enough coal into the dying fire to ,‘ renew without choking it. “There!" he said. [or the moment. Is it Cinderella's Job in get breakfast these cold morn- i. ‘ins-r?" Tiny shook her head shyly. She beg fl.‘ to explain that she hadn't ‘been able to sleep on a sofa, in a strange room, but gemembered that ‘it; s because of nun she'd been an ed to both. She stopped and lus ed again. CHAPTER V1. The Prince Atonel / ' “Poor little Cinderella!" Sheridan pitied her. “I'm afraid you were turned out of your room for me. 1 wouldn't have let that happen if I'd known, but it didn't occur to inc there might be a third member of the family here! It's a. shame! They might have put me anywhere; I'd have been all right. It was mighty good of you and your people to givc up your rooms to us. I don't l-mow what the ladies would have done without you! Maybe Miss Sheen would like to be your» fairy god- another, Cinderella! You must sec her before we go. I got up early, to find my chauffeur, and--" "Oh, no!" Terry broke but. “Please --I don't want to see Miss Sheen. She-she doesn't like mo." The young man stared more than ever. “Why, she doesn't know you exist." “Yes, she does!" Terry confessed. "When did you meet me?" “I—don't want to tell you," came in a whisper. Sheridan could see only the top of the child's hcad and floods‘ of tangled, bright red curls. "But I went you to tell! Look here, Cinderella, how do you know I'm not the Prince, giving you a roy- n! command?" Somehow he dragged the story Irom her, and listened gravely, as to an affair of state. “That's right made Cinderella answer a number of questions: tvhcther she liked life at the Inn as well as at Silvcrwood; whcihcr she wcnt to school; what she wanted to be when she grow up. He seemed interested to hear that she didnt like the Blue Moon, be- cause it was too noisy; that she had lessons at hom like to send hcr to a convent school, where she would grow up quiet and gentle, not like the girls who came to the Inn, and laughed so loudly and smoked, and danced queer dances, and talked slang. She wouldn't be able to do what Mother wanted, though: Father said it would cost too much money, Mary Desmond appeared in the midst of this conversation, aston- ished to find the fire alight, and Mr. Sheridan in the kitchen. He apologized. saying that he'd come down to consult the chauffeur, but pflSSlng the open (lOOi' had scen "Miss Cinderella" struggling with the coal scuttle. Terry had a bad moment, then, re- alizing that she ought not to have told about Bctiy and the bcai‘. She fcarcd that "the Prince" might in- advertcntly betray her, but hc did not. He gave the fibbing-that h along of the De verwood. Tcrry loved him for his coiisidcr_ ation, and fclt passionately grate- ful. She knew now that she could trust him, and wasn't worried when Mother sent her upstairs with a message to Father. Shaving water had to be taken. and various other errands run. Lat- er. when Betty Sheen's too well re- membred voice was heard. the child bolted like a rabbit to the pink and blue room where she had slept. She longed to see Miles Sheridan again! It secmcd to hci" that never had she wished for anything as impressiom-without e had known all smonds‘ past at Sil- you used to wood." he said, thoughtfully, Terry nodded, her lips quivering. "I ‘lived there, too, when I was a little ‘boy. I loved thc place! Did may, “Oh, yes!" she breathed. Sheridan reflected a minute. "Arc mu too old {or a Teddy bear now?" wanted to know. "A big one, with a squeak and eyes that move?" Riffs heart beat fast. "I-I’d iIther be true to that Teddy bear, think you." she answered. "Another one wouldn't be the same. I loved him too much." "You're A loyal little thing." Miles Sheridan praised her. "Well, I must think of something else to do, to nuke up for the past. Would you like-a surprise?” "I'd love it, if-it didn't come from Miss Sheen. please." truthful Terry. "I'd rather she needn't even know. It would be spoiled if she did." Miss Sheen's fiance was amused rather than offended. He promised that he himself would think out the live at Silver- , much. He was so kind, so handsome, {so wondcrful—-a real Prince. And he thad said that he would be her i Prince-"Ciridcrelia's Mince!" Still, rTcrry couldn't go where Miss Sheen ivas, not even to soc him. Shc couldn't. “Now they're having breakfast," she thought. "Now they'll be going." She heard the sound of the motor, and. peeping out of the window, esaw the large grey limousine which ihad been rolled into the garage for [the night. The chauffeur had re- lpaired it. as Mother had prophesied, ‘in time for an early start. . Fascinated, the child watched the ‘smart suitcases being piled in. Next, -the ladies stepped into the car. .Bctty first. despite the age of her meek-looking companion. Tcrry did not sec Miss Sheen's fgpjjgd the tomfacc. but there was a. gicitm of pale b jgold hair under n mourning toque, and Betty's figure nt twenty-one was only fl little plumper than at eight- een. It gave thc child a pang that her the Prince Charming should belong . u.» e. but Mother would; Everyone makes mistakes. They say it is tho onlv way to learn. But in the mnitcr of clothes it is dif- ficult and humiliating to make too many, and perhaps our Worst 01195 are unconscious Shall we tell you what made us think in this sad strninil-Brillianl sunshine and prtticoats! One well-drcsscd woman once confessed that she found petti- coats harder than anything else to have cxactly right. Once under a voile dress she had worn a crepe- j dc-Chine petticoat that seemed quite sufficient. but kind friends had told her firmly that it wasn't! And every light dress sccms to need a diffcrcnt but exact length of petticoat. since as inch or so too short, or an inch too long will spoil all. So to prevent unpleasant shocks. it is as wcii to study your hcm lines carcfuiiy in your long lookinB- glass-or. better still, to decide on the length your day frocks are go- ing to be while you are making _thcm now, and stick to that length i for all the season. Then your petti- coats can correspond sacrifices she has to make. And. if she docs not have thcm;_if she is married to a man for whom she docs not care, who raises no thrill in her caresses she shrinks away, to whom‘ she can give only wlfely duty instealil of wiiely devotion, then is she poor indeed, no matter if he hangs her wit. i matched pearls and decks hcr out like a clothes holf-ie 611d fool-ls 1191’ 9n There isn't enough money in the world to buy married happiness. That is a gift of the gods. No one ever 511W 11 111111115" ‘who married for money who even looked contented. nlghtingales’ tongues. The mother who urges her daughter to marry for money fofilfils mill» the iun of money is in the making, woman no other thrill so great as she gets out of helping her husband make his fortune, fighting with him s gling, achieving. with every thought oftcn heard the ivifc of one of the most famous engiii-Pcrs in this country say that the happiest time in her lllc was when she iivcd in a mining camp and cooked for her husband and washed his Clothes- Furthermorc. when mother tries poor sweetheart for a rich suitor. she not infrequently makes a bad guess For at 40 the rich boy who inherited his money has generally spent it and is down and out. whil ethe poor boy has and backs the wrong horse. made his fortune. t So I think mothers make a greet daughters’ suitors simply because th taining Croesus unawares and. anyway, the girl u-ho the glory and the circling wings, wh ncvci" oven gvlimpscslflw breast and from whose not the spending. Life can give a. houider to shoulder, planning, strug- arid ambition in common. I. have to make her daughter give up her t mistake when they object to their ey are Door. They may be enter- marries for love sees ich the girl who marries for money DOROTHY DIX. Betty Sheen! Now h_e was getting into the 08-1‘- Hc was so slim that his back looked boyish. though he was 23 or 24! She might not sec his face again-ever. But-yes. he had stopped! He turned, glanced up, and caught Sight of Terry at the window. He smicd. that humorous, un- forgettable smile, and taking off his ‘llflt as if she were a. grown-up girl, waved it. Then he jumped into the car. and it slid away. i The child was still at the window l AMorningSmile HAD NOT EATEN IT A young man from the South went to spend his holidays with some friends in Yorkshire. He, caught a chill in travelling and was confined to bed. His histcss thoughtj she would give her visitor a treat during his confinement, so she bak- ed a Yorkshire pudding and wok it ‘when Mother came running up, out P9515“- "Ju-‘il "Y “"53 5119 531d. of breath from the haste she had "rill 5m“ W111‘ c°ldrn made. "Oh, my baby!" she painted. “The most wonderful thing! That time “"91" 5119i dear young man knew about our trouble with Mrs. Parmalcc. and how she was like a mother or grand- mother to him. so he wants to atone ‘me-sir- bnbly we were trcaicd. He lovcd her: to us for her sakc. He asked mo about you-and of it! He's got Father to consent. foo! My babyll be safe, far away from the ugly things licrc till she's a big girl, seventeen years old. Think of that!" "Oh, Mother, why does he do it for e?" Terry asked, in Mary's arms. "I don't know, except for what he said: to ‘atone.’ And because he's kind." Mary kept to herself Sheri- dan's last words: "Your little daughter is the most oautiftil child I ever saw. You're right not to wnut her brought up at nn inn. It wouldn't do! She ought to amount to something in futurc." It was bcst not to put ‘ideas’ in "Baby's" head. (To Be Continued.) III to Li‘..- I..,...i.-»- .- I ! Then she left him. Going up some nquircd, "Weli, have: ye eticn it up?" j "Eaten it? Eaten it?" gasped the. visitor. "isn't that perfectly ridiculous!" sending you t0,cxclaimcd Mrs. Binks. "That young school. 1' told him my great wish. He IM made me tell! And he's going to pay come for the convent for you—seven years lolaim rs. Upstart who lives around the r actually has the audacity to that she is of royal lineage." "Well,“ said the head of the house, stroking his gray moustache as he thought of bygone days, "shc may not be so far wrong at that. I rc- member her mothcr when she was a girl, and, believe me, she was some queen." H I K-d If Kidney Trouble or Bladder Weak- ‘ nus makes you suffer from Getting Nights, Nrrvousncss, Diuiness, R irummtsm, Stiffness, llurning, Smnrting, Itching or Acidity try the Doctor's prescription Cysiex (Sisa- (ex. Must end your troubles in B day: or money buck. Only c at dniggisu. "No, I'm wearing it on mywnc I THE COOK'S CORNER Frozen Pudding 3 tablespoons quick cooking tap- oca. 2 cups milk. scaided ‘t teaspoon salt 1-3 cup sugar 3 tablespoons I 2 tablespoons s 2 egg whites 1 cup cream, whipped l teaspoon vanilla ‘i teaspoon almond extract 12 almonds, blanched, sliced. and toasted. 4 tablespoons candied cherries, ed i ight corn syrup ugar 4 tablespoons candied pineapple, finely diced. Add tapioca to milk, and cook in double boiler 15 minutes, or until tapioca is clear and mixture thick-j cried. stirring frequently, Strain hot mixture, stirring (not rubbing) through very fine sieve, onto salt, 1-3 cup sugar, and cnrn syrup. Stir until sugar is dissolved. cool. Add 2 table- spoons sugar to egg whites and beat until stiff. Fold into cold tapioca ‘mixture. Fold in cream, flavoring, lnuts, and fruits. Turn into freezing tray of automatic refrigerator and ',frccze as rapidly as possible-S to 4 hours usually required. Makes one quart frozen pudding. A posie gives emphasis to the cool flowered shoulders. so utterly femi- nine and smart. You'll like the square cut of the neckline. It's so cool and flattering. The panelled skirt is slenderizing. It will give you a lovely appearance, Chiffon cotton voile print. that tubs so perfectly made the original model pictured. Finish the edge of the sleeve frills with picot (done professionally) or roll the edges, if you prefer. Plain materials as tub pastel silks, linen. novelty cottons, etc., also lend themselves excellently to this model. Other fascinating idcas are chif- fon prints, striped or dotted lawn, eyelet batlsie, etc. Style No. 403 is designed for sizes l4, l6, 18 years, 36. 3B and 40 inches bust. Size l6 i-equirse 3% yards of 39-inch material. Price of PATTERN I5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. Name Street Address HUGE GOLD NUGGET FOUND MOSCOW, July iz-Discovery of a gold nugget weighing 3.663 grams was reported today from the Altai mines. A nugget weighing 3,200 grams was found recently in Kas- akstan, according to advices from that district. 1 cup milk. Cream butter and sugar and work in fiour thoroughly. Add lemon Juice and slightly beaten egg yolks. Stir in milk slowly. Fold in stiffly beaten N-gg whites. Put into buiicrcd dish and set, in pan of water to bake 30 minutes in a moderate oven. Chill before serving. NEURIT“ QM Ii h|fl U h mikrzhr: Illlv h. ijfil Iiemon Pudding i tablespoon butter ‘l tabfcsjians fiour , 2 eggs . 2-3 cup sugar l Juice i large lemon I pimp- l-NJM Eiill it How Many Need Aid In Seeing If you were to guess, how many persons in 100 would you say need an eye service? Would you say ten? Or twen- ty? Or more? The correct ans- wer ls very close to 50. We mean of those who do NOT wear a correction. Does that not Indicate a too prevalent neglect of the eyes? And does it not suggest that many should consider the subject more seriously. G. F. IIIITBIIESOI OPTOMETBIBT the 18th of July at one o'clock P. l\_ his farm of I31 acres with growing “crop, situated nt J0hnsl0n's Rive! about ten miles from (‘hztrlottct ' Well watered with brook also piling In house. 90 acres clear, balance co cred with hard and soft wood. Als at same time all farm stock and Imu plements. ‘ vi DONALD CURRIE ‘ W, J. McEACHERN, Auctioneer. L-66li-7-fri-mon-wed-6i. 1-223 Tenders Wantecl Tenders will be received by undersigned up to 6 P. M. on I-‘rldiig ' July 20th, I934, for the constructing of a concrete foundation under flgq Bedcque United ('hurch, Plan and specification can be at the store of Mr. W. T. Bown Bedeque. The lowest or any ten lot necessarily accepted, (Signed) / mos. itrovse, j Sccy. of‘ (‘omrnlfledq t Profession ~——————-——1""". "_""'l Dr. R. 0. Macileill PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office, Phillips Bldg, Phone 811i Res. 162 Dorchester St. Phone , Office Hours 9-11 A.M. l-3 l’ ‘ l 6.30-8.30 P. Ill. and by Appointment. --3-mh. MCLEOD Co‘ BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Bis-winter and Attorncy-ut-Il‘ MONEY To LOAN OflIcI-r IR" Richmond SIIQQ‘ a_l ‘Cards L-B Prohibition (JOIYIHIISSM Chas. I-I. Black. ChaZrinI-llc Charlottetoyn. Jas. n. McDonald, west st. raid. John Simpson, Hamilton. Send all information raga-Milli infractions of PROIIIBITION LOT to the above or to Inspector I- I‘ WI P., Char‘ MIQII. NORMAN W. LOWTHER Barrister 8i Attorney At Lew R6 Great Georgi- Sirccl. (Yhzirlotictown, I‘. Ii. I. MONEY TO LOAN itlleiotlwfllifaiheson nalmrsran, soucrron. BTO- Money to Loan Cnllectlolll J ~ Oflicn: 140 Richmond Street». 1