TUESDAY. run or THE mourn SPECIALS Men's SUITS $22.50up Men's Winter OVERCOATS . . . . $14-95 IIP Men's DRESS PANTS Men's Heavy Fleece COMBS. . . . . . . $2.49 Men's Plaid "Jae" SHIRTS . . . . . . . . . $8.95 Men's WORK SHIRTS . . . . . . . . . . $1.98 up Men's Heavy PARKAS . . . . . . . . $10-00 l-IP I44 Gt. Geo. St. .........-$4.95up SPECIALS IN TIIE BOYS’ DEPT. Boys‘ Winter OVERCOATS $6.95 to $10.00 Boys‘ Heavy Boys‘ "Frieze" Cloth JACKETS . . . . . $2.95 Boys‘ Heavy Fleece COMBS. . . . . . . $1.84 Boys‘ WORK SHIRTS .. . . . . . . . . . $1.69 up Boys‘ Heavy BREECHES . . . . . . . $2.49 up The GREENIIIIL G0. LTD. PARKAS 6.95 up WEAR Ch'town, P.E.I. MEN'S AND BOYS‘ MT: Mention w. i. The January meeting l Actual Facts Prove Lou o! Hair Often Caused by Scalp Condition Hair experts say a “tight scalp" —pore-clogged with dirt or dandruiI-misy fail to grow enough new hairs to replace the 46 to 80 hairs you lose every day. To keep your hair abundant, glossy and alive-looking, a weekly shampoo ia recom- mended. Your hair is a "catch- all" for dirt, dust and smoke in the air, and these combine with natural scalp oil, perspira- tion, dried-skin particles and dandruff-to form a waxy accumulation that seals itself tightly over your scalp and chokes off‘ nourishment from the hair. You should wash your hair once a week-for constant scalp cleanliness is essential to a healthy, abundant head o!‘ hair. The surest way is with a shampoo actually guaranteed to remove danclruff—Fitch TUE GUARDIAN. CHARLOTTETOWN lio You GomIlGuI llair Faster Than ll Grows In? Dandrufl‘ Remover Shampoo. Fitch Dandruff Remover Shampoo washes away every trace of dirt and dandruff. It gets r’ ht down into the tiny hair o ‘nings in your seal leaving your scalp antiseptica y clean and able to breathe freely. It gives your hairachance t0 et proper nourishment for healt y growth and natural gloss. Prove If Yourself Get Fitch Dandruff Remover Slisnipoo for healthy‘, good- looking hair-try t e 6-0:. economy size, 69c._'l‘ake care oi your hair-use Fitch tonight. (labililiilli hlMUVll llllwfll‘ IQ: w Dandruff Remover SHAMPOO n sponded to—w_ith a gift from the grab bag which realized $1.65. A motion was moved seconded and curred that green and white is our choice for Copenhagen Auto- ‘ graph quilt. It was also move sec- onded and carried that a sewing club be organized in the district. Secretary‘ to contact Miss Maylea Boswell about same. Sewing was glVEIi out by the Mm Wanda“ Jones with Bnenm y {tledt Cross Corrévgrlor. It was! a$eed once oi 10 members and two visit-I 1‘; H“ gimme e p“ “'13 °""‘ of Mt. ors. Meeting opened by repeatingl “a a as 50°“ "5 P055‘ e to y taken to sick. Collection amounted l to .86. Next meeting to be at the 1 home of Mrs. Malcolm MacRae on l February 7th. By motion meeting adjourned. A delicious lunch was served by the hostess. MARATHON FIGHT The longest fight on record was between Andy Bowen and Jack ,Burke at New Orleans in Alpi-il, '1893.. lasting HO-YOIUIIGS and tak- lng '7 hours, 10 minutes. Melllck W, I. met at the home of l Creed in unison. Roll call was re- l mcreflse flmmces- Tm” “Hi5 were e___ _?7. q-cwfrv X A new triumph of Hudson's famous "Slep-Down” Design You ride securely-An Hudson's single-unit, welded, all steel Monobilt body-and-frames*~safely within a box-section foundation frame that surrounds See this engineering triumph . . . a trim-size, new ear with the sensational advantages of Hudson's years-ahead “step-down"design. . I A streamlined beauty with a colorful new Interior featuring gorgeous wool fabrics combined with plastic Dura-fab trim . . . A neat-as-can-be automobile with more room than any other car at any price, except another Hudson; yet a ear that costs you less to buy . . . less to drive! - Hudson's New Pacemaker is here today! . . e On display today! . . . You can see It today! I s For the first time in motor-car history, you can have compactness and lower price with big-car comfort and riding qualities. For here is an agile cai- with more inside room than in any other car at any price, except another Hudson. It's a trim, tidy car with a lower center of gravity than any other make-and because of this you get n smoother road-hugging ride than is possible in even the costliest cars built the old-fashioned way. Here, Hudson's "step-down” design gives you not only all the room, comfort, safety and amazing readability, but also all the low-built beauty, the long, free-flowing lines that can come only with the "step-down” way of building motor cars. Every body line is naturally beautiful, even to the graceful curves of the Full-View windshield. w. n. JENKINS’ ' Provincial" Distributor . Susnrlorsids-Isiand Equipment Go. illhsrton-Gordon’: Garage Announcing the New Lowe y f fiz/dsw/ We've/Jr c!“ it the passenger compartment, wheels~relaxed in the roomiest seats in any auto- mobile. This is Hudson’s new Pacemaker . . . with the new high-compression Pacemaker engine, packed engine that test drivers call "the smoothest, sweetest we've ever driven!” . lived engine with new carburetion and fuel intake that make it a lighting-like performer with surprisingly saving ways! There are more . . . many more . . . iresli, colorful and desirable features in the great new car . . . too many to mention here. Hadn’t you better see it today? 9 Trademark and Pnfenlr Pending. IiPIIGBEI all- even outside the rear the power- . . the rugged, long- IIIIW . . . 3 GREAT HUDSON PACEMAKEI SIR!!! HUDSON Si!!! Still! rr srsr 0"“ ens-w " -——|oovvw ossrcw HUDSON SERIES HUDSON COMMODOII CUSTOM SERIES zoo ~ 212 Greet George Street ‘The Morning l is iisar lls Br Susan Glelpel I I Ho nodded-frowned then, im-I patient with this diversion. He went ‘, on: “We lived here in this house like brother and sister, She had lost her own brother. She grieved for him." (Pauses between terse sentences—as if going by much h, hadn't time and strength to say.) "I wld her I'd be hei- brother, And after s time-she cams to think of ine as her brother. "That was the trouble," he whis- pered, as if again seeing it for himself. as well as telling Lydia. “She did just that-cams to think of me se her brother. Arid me-at first it was that way with me too. Until she grew up. Then I didn't want her to think of ms as hei- brother!" Rb perused and turned to Lydia. "Do you i-e- member how she looked?" “Oh. yesl" she said. “I never saw anyone so beautiful." "And no one else ever did. She was llkePI can't say it. How can you? Anything I sald-dwouldnd. be fair to her." He sat there dwelling with it, his face a little relaxed. “I remember the first day I knew I didn't. want to be her brother. The apple trees were in bloom and she was among them." Sharply he drew in his breath as he saw it again. ‘The blossoms-J‘ he whis- pered. "She was like the blossoms. ‘nhen I knew; as she drew down e bough and smelled it, held it against her face, then-then I wasn't as I was before, Why it came all at once," he said wonder- ingly. “There wasn't anything else then. It filled the world-it was the world. I loved her and that was my life and my life wasn't any- thing else." ‘ Chapter XXIX ‘Ilhis gaunt silent man, things held within him all his 1i.fs—so hard for him to talk of love. Timid. 1y Lydia put out s. hand to touch him-but didn't, not quite. "And after that I didn't know what to do." It came from so deep and was said so simply. "I think I can understand, Fath- er." He shook his head. "No. No, you can't. Hertha had been so frighten- ed. Things had halprpen to her too awful to tell. She wasn't herself with other people. She-she held back. It was just with us- here at home. She did come to feel at home here. Sale here. Safe from the world. She wanted it to b6- just the way it was. And I was her brother. "Then Mother and Father both died in the Same week. It was more shock io hcr than to me. It was like things going to pieces again. the wiry they had before. I-ler own Mother and Father-they died to- gether; They were drowned, and she was separated from her broth- er. and everything that had been -wssn‘t any more. Now that all came back. Now that would happen again, she thought. I had to com- fort her." He moaned. “Oh, it was harm-comfort her like s. brother when I-when I loved her—the way I loved hcr. “What could I do?" he cried- nnd the torment of those days tortured this moment. "She said. ‘I have you John. You are all I have.‘ She meant-as s brother. "It seemed she couldn't have stood any more changes then. couldn't have stood knowing my feeling wasn't like-like that I had led hcr to believe. So we Just stayed on here together for a while-her i’ v.- rrotclr Ia cl, semi-lounge mil srmnd and nae-alone in this house, her depending on me as a brother and me-" he i-wisterl his hands‘ together. "I didn't know how to stand it! I didn't know what to do! She'd touch mo and--well. it was‘ hard." he said more calmly. "She was more beautiful all the time. I used to Say good night to hcr‘ and-yes; it was hrlrd. | "Then some brlsyborly cnmr. Seems I Wrmflfl ~nlnne in the same house. Anyway they overr- making it their business. I was worklnu over ln the fioldi that day and this wmnnn talked to Y-Icrthrl. Whcn I came in she threw her arms around me and crlellz‘, Don't let them fake m4- mvzly! You’ won't John. will you? Don't let them separate us. We'll stnv here together in this house! Tell mo! Tell me yes. I'm so afraid! She had her arms around me. and then-- me, ion, holding her to me. tolling her we would never br- apart. "So I told her there was one wav. We could get married, I said. "But we couldn't, she said. We were brother and sister-just like brother and sister, she said. “But we weren't really. I would tell her. And then. the best I could I told her I didn't feel like her brothor now. It was her husband I wnnted to be. “This-it shocked her. more than I knew. I guess. She went around so quiet. And after a day or two she asked was it the only way we could go on living together in this house. And I—God forgive Ins-I told hei- yes." He sank back. so spent Lydia was , afraid. "Maybe God has forgiven me," he said when he could go on. "He Punished ins ough-eo msy- , be- I "She never felt my different," he said slowly. "She always thwsht of me as her brother. Bhs thought to be married to ‘me was wrong." Lydia breathed ‘Tailiel\—" in NOf-‘TH AMHIKAN i/ll L. S. STFVENSON {lb/Mn ll l-l/IW/lhii. I40 RICHMOND ST. AAIITIIAI. COAPANY At Tip 'I'np 'I‘ailnrs you get this combination of Ilanrl crnflsrriurisliip, made-to-measure tailoring and lino fuIlrir-s at a price not equalled for value anywhere in flic world. Many thousands oi Canada's host-dressed business and professional mcn will confirm iliis fact. Visit lis now wliile you still Spring range to clioosc from. STYLE 240%.,-hl|fl4fl sin e-breoael utfon. Sh’ hcly urider shoulder. fuller rhea! and bl es, and with aful lower uuisflirre will! low set buttons pockets, and straighter ride ledlllh / JANUARY 31, 1950 arollb priced clothing. a liavo our entire run/vs GREATEST A new is the Zllssrlc of a Well-Dressed Man.‘ Tlavo you noticed that ‘veil-dressed men have one thing in common. They look comfortable in their clothes . . . and their clothes look comfortable on tlicm. You get this well-dressed look of easy-l fitting comfort in a Tip Top Tailors suit. l You get it because here your suit is] tailored to your own individual mcssurcg merits. Here it is cut and styled to suit yourvpe-wmal requirements. In patterns too, Tip Top Tailors is ontstandinv. You may choose from literally hundreds of beautiful imported and domestic woollcns in an almost unbelievable variety of colours, patterns and weaves. Everyone is of I. a quality usually found in rnucli higher CLOTIIIN G VALUE ' y in flméé/ l I/QIINTED 99 Grafton Street , swift deep feeling. "I tried to make it different, By wiles to hII-belns sentle. But —" his face flushed with the words —"a men loves as 'man was meant to love. She-she tried to be good, as she put it. she ssfd dis would :0 ynyzhhilrlilzitlor madlllut nor-i 0n’ ever d thing but horrify her." m, Ilfllle turned her face sway, than covered it. To be sentinel adorn» sun» (Continued mini Pegs s) lmnoscwoilmnlaitiarzent wedrouse. “edforsberry readied for s cllwklnl i0 080i’! other, Grouse talk. He couldn't understand it b“ u ""1103! ‘ ed and satis- fied and unafraid. Roddy quiver- 0H1! two lumps away! They were so riser it seemed to him he could almost reach out. and touch ulm- 314 "is lround been barn he would have been sure of one vgyoutlidu have been . vered sin as he thought of it. u 3"‘ "ll Ifmind wasn't bare. It V" "VIM with deep mow‘ and u"? '9" ‘W0 Jumps sway. ‘lire first jump could be msde all right, llll It ‘Imild land him in mow '4” 49in i0 lump learn. Those two walling dinners so nesr still wleesfsrsweyssiftheywsre like Tlumd \ lflsanq suns, u ii Roddy could do was to lio ttlerl and shiver. Drive out A ._/\ HES