1 z n-nq- I ...,;:‘1.. i i‘?! E??? Fm: PAGE TWO THE CHARLOTTETOWNNQIZAIIDIAN ' » MARCH 1. 192.2 - Fasluons -:- Litera tu re‘ l? Woman% Realm -:- Social and Personal -.- HOPE IJVII What the Fashionables are Wearing spent the “mg of the week in Hope River, guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur . Homing. Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With -: ; Every Pattern Mm n,“ Greefmn, Newton was a visitor in Hope River and St. Ann's recently- By Annabelle Worthington l bake in B. hot o\'en (400 deg. 1*.) for one hour. This recipe makes eight to ten servings. Happy! Well I guess in such a. comfy dress for playtime. The dropped banded shoulders form the brief sleeves. It's so simple, it would almost be run up on the sewing machine and finished before breakfast. Just a few seams to join and finish the neck and arms with the applied band trim. Rod and white plalded cotton broadcloth with- plain white is fetching, as pictured. Light navy blue. pique with tiny white dots and plain white trim is l typically French. Dimities, batiste prints and dot- tcd slviss are dainty as can be and sturdy too. Style No. 984 is designed in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 require-s 151'. yards 32 or 39- inch with l5 yard 35-inch contrast- ing. - Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin prefened.) Price of pattern 15 cents. Mrs. Hannah Mbwwen. Road who was among the visitors in the city last week has returned home. ‘ Mrs. Gerald Fleming acwmnulfed fby was Agnes Fleming visited Glyrlde River, last week. sue-lie °1 M155 Abbie Fraser. A party consisting of Ralph Coles, Leonard cullen. Gerald Fleming, Allan 'I‘A'flll'l0y and Arthur Fleming, motored to Stanley Bridge Satur- day to attend the horse races. Mr. Lawrence Doucette, Rustico visited Hope River recently. Mud Clara Dolrofl, lvlbylleld spent Sunday in Bay View, guests of Mr. "and Mrs. Henry Gallant. l Mr. Allan Trainer, 8t. Ann's spent last week in Hope River. Messrs D'Arcy Naming and Ralph Cole; attended the hockey match at Glasgow Saturday evening. Messrs Ronald McLcllan and Dermot Fleming, St. Ann's were a- mong the visitors in Hope River For The Cook No. 984. Size ..................... HAMBURG CORN LOAF Nam” 1”‘ “wk- 1 can sweet cmL Street Address Mrs. Thomas Reid.‘ North Road. 1 pound hamburg visited Hope River recently, guest 1 we“ beaten~egg_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John 1 teaspoon salt. City 5mg, quuen, ‘i teaspoon pcppvr. 1 medium-sized '——""-————— Miss Margaret Gallant l; spend- Olllilll chopped fine. ' 2 tablespoons melted butter. Cracker crumbs. Mix ingredients well. Add enough cracker crumbs to make a solid pack. Put into greased loaf pan and Try Lydia E. Pinllllam’: Vegetable Compound l lng a brief holiday in St. Patrick's with her parents, m. and Mrs. AMorningSmile Gilbert Gallant. j_ We are glad to lcpol-t that little Miss Mergam Bold, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Roid who has been ill. has recovered com- pletely and has resumed her stud- ies at Stanley Bridge School. When the dub player of a four- , SW19 finally reached the ninth hole §‘aftcr being in the rough most‘of the time his partner called him aside. "By the way, have you paid your club dues this year?" he asked. "I have." replied the other. "Are you in bad with the greens Miss Patricia Munphy, Charlotte- town, spent the week end in Mill- vale, guest of hel- parents, Mr. and committee?» Mrs. Ioemlrlg Murphy. "No, not that I know of. Why do you ask?” Our school is progressing nicely under the Lowther. "Well." said his partner, "if you ‘ have paid your dues and you're not ' in bad with the greens committee I can't sec any reason why you're not entitled to play on the fairways." anagelnent of Miss Cried Herself l0 Sleep All worn out . . . splitting headaches make life hideous every month. Sh: needs a tonic . . . Lydia E. Pinkllazlfs Vegetable Compound relieves cramps. Mr. "Sid" Cameron of Margaret Mr. Andrew Gallant, Freetown. centre . attacks VAooRon week, guest OI IlLI‘. and MKS. JOIHI Quinn. Deapite the inclememy of the weather our Rural Mall courier, m’. "Bobby" Smith was on deck as regular as usual. IRIS SCHOOL The honor roll of Iris School for the month of February is as follows: . GRADE VIII-i Mary Boyne, 2 John Bell, 3 Emma Morrow. GRADE VII-l Jonneva. Morrow. GRADE VI—1 Christena. MacLeod 2 Freeman Hume. GRADE IV-l Anna Bell, 2 Sin- clair Macbean, 3 Donnie Matheson. d Mark Young. , GRADE III--1 Mary Bell. 2 Nap- ier MacDonald. GRADE II (SrJ 1 Emily Math- eson, 2 Earl MacLeod, 3 Jennie Mor- row. GRADE I (Sn) l Jean Hume,-2 Leigh Stewart. 3 Marlon Ma/thason 4 Charles Young. , GRADE I (Jr) 1 Devone Bell. Perfect attendance: Mary Boyne. Jonneva. Morrow, Freeman Hume, Jean Hume, Marlon Matheson. ‘Teacher-Mary Herring. N0 Sleep, No Rest -— Gas, Gas All The Time "F0? 2° years I had indigestion and gas. Was restless, nervous and could not sleep. Adlerlka rid me of I ‘ a flow . u“, ,3“; iDorotIly Dzx 31;; ,;=,,;;;; ‘ " .4- little children, be down on your knou thanking Heaven f g ________ °' l‘ ‘W mu. | n a plmul to see strong young m,“ mum“: t they might juatps well have, because they are Iungmga 21y,“ h“ If You Would Be Happy, Learn to Look for Happiness; Laugh Off Your Troubles and Enjoy What You Have; Don’t Ask too Much of People or Expect too Much of the Future, and be Grateful for Small Favors i TEN RULES FOB HAPPINESS A correspondent asks me how she can be happy in a. world that is full of troubles and tribulations and anxieties and disappointments. No one can answer that question. because no human being has ever achiev- ed perfect hapiness. There is always a cloud somewhere on the horizon, always a fly in the oint- ment, always a. little discordant note somewhere in the harmony, always something we would have dif- ferent. But. undoubtedly, to a very large extent, hap- piness ls a matter of self-determination instead of luck. as is popularly supposed. We can make our- selves happy or miserable, as we choose, and hero are ten rule: that I personally have found work out satisfactorily. First. have a will m heroines!- ness as intelligently and energetically as you would any other definitely thing you desired. Fight for it. Don't Just weakly succumb to dis- content and conditions, or people who rub you the mong way and IWBP you peevlsh and fretful, and that take all the Joy out of you, unless there ls some great moral obligation that forces you to endure this martyrdom. Seek happi- Don't live with people who antagonize you if it can pcsfilbly be helpi ed. Seek cheerful companionship. Gratlfy your little whims and tastes so long as they do not injure others. Cultivate a. pleasure in sim- ple things. You can get a. lot of thrills out of an exquisite view, or a gorgeous sunset, or a good dinner, if you will consciously savor it. Remember that the one individual on earth from whom you never can get away is yourself and make yourself good company for ywrlfllf by thinking cheerful thoughts instead of letting your mind dwell on old sorrows and old wrongs and old grievances. Don't be one of the people who never “get over" the death of one they loved, or who are still gloom- lng over the money they lost forty years ago. Second. Laugh things off. There are so many things in life over which we must either laugh or weep, so many things that are either trag- edies or jokes, according to what we make of them. The little peculiari- ties of those with whom we live can either run us mad or be an endless source of amusement. tho world to do with hlPDlncu. And it in still more pitim "mm" "d "the." "m"! 11° Dlessur out of their children ling because they an tied down at home with babies, 0).‘ bee-a Johnny is noisy, or the money bu to be Spent on hum; 1m teeth fixed instead of on golf or a new frock. “He: l And lots of foolish people put off being happy go gome h, They are going to be happy when they get rich. They are when they are old. The husbands and wives are going other after the children an grown up. But you can't pqgtpone b happy. You've Bot to Iet the pleasure out of a thing now or ncve- e so those who have denied themselves every joy to have a great {dlmd wilen they are old find out that they have waited too long. The fir“ lost their capacity for enjoyment. y a" -___._ Fourth. Don't expect foo much. Don't think you have g to the earth with a blue ribbon tied around it. Don't think that you a always going to get all of the breaks with no bad luck thrown in. no? beat upon your breast and howl to Heaven because you have 131mm m; disappointments. lure tlmg 801m; l0 o...“ W euloy em. he fight Don't cry out that nlarrlage in a. failure because it involves hflfrighl nnd responsibilities and calls for sacrifices. Don't feel that you h‘? been defrauded in marriage because your wife is not a Fbllies beauty m; a wlsecracker. Think of what a good cook she fa and how she m“ your money and helps you along. Don't dwell on hlwlng missed you, soulmate bacaua your husband is a commonplace man who PM," A1110! '11‘ Andy t0 "Mourning Becomes Electra." Enjoy the nmnumu and Paris nnery he given you. Fifth. Don’t ask too much. Don't be greedy. Don't expect to m more than your fair share. There are a lot of people who make them. selves unhappy by expecting to be special pets of Providence, always ask1ns= “Why llbould 1 be poor? Why should misiort to me‘! Why should I lose those I love?" They m U118 COmQ The happy are those who accept the common lot and are grateful: small favors. They are contented with little things and with their lo in life. They do not wear themselves out in doing the fruitless tun Nature never intended them to do. or embltter themselves by an" , those who have more than they have. The only successful people arolthose who have attained their ambl- tion. even if it is only to be the champion checker player in the villa; Those who are haPPy are those who want little and get that little. DOROTHY mx, To Bo Continued on Wedauday “lIlEMBlEll llKE ll lEAl” Ills: lllllfflilfillflh Efi VlhllShTll llr. WIISWIIPIS. “TIOVYBIIIQOIZIIIIIICIIIQfi- tmlbhllnm." You can laugh off Mary's and John's funny little ways, or you can l fight over them for forty years. You can smile over the criticisms that your friends make of you and forget them, or you can let them rankle ln your heart and flll it with bitterness. There is no such disinfectant as a sense of humor. It will take the sting out of the wounds dealt by malice and envy and all uncharitableness and heal all of the abrasions that are gasclliéllddf eat and sleep n0W."—-Mr5_ You can't get rld of gas by doc- tcrlng the stomach. For gas stays in the UPPER bowel. Adlcrika reaches BOTH upper and lower bowel. _ Wfishlflg 011i poisons which cause ; Bus. nervousness. bad sleep. Get Ad- ‘ lerlka today: y0u‘ll 8186p good w- night. Hughes Drug Co., Ltd. For free anmpln lend ‘Zn alum]? In ADLERIKA $0., inflicted on our vanity and self-love. Third. Enjoy what you have, and do it now. Most people miss all pleasure in what they have because their whole attention is focusscd in wanting something they haven't got, and so theylose the happiness they might have. Don't make this mistake. If you have health, ex- ult in it. Realize you have something to give three cheers for every minute of the day. If you have youth, rejoice in it. Those who are youngreally don't need anything else. They are on their tlptoes al- ‘ whom you love, and if you have ' tion I thought I would nova recover,’ couldn't sleep. I hld indlgu- bailweighedculyfl .. tioncvcrytimelatmlvury Afterfakingdxbumof noisemadc me trcmblclika: In“ pllbfmnunlygymy l leaf. After faking the flnt box m c’ n new woman of m." i of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills I ‘lllounndl of people lu noticed that my fooddlgested u. expel-laud such help and better, so I continued until I lief from the blood-cinching lladfakenslxboxu. Wbeal virtucsofDlzwilliaaafPhk Mn. Wilson Boombour, Eh . wrltesMissAnnlMurphymfSLOdflon, Onpsfafel: "BdorcItookDr. . Que. “Iwxsso wuklcould scarcely Plnkflllslwuaoompleoewruk. walk or even stand, and so nervous I appetite, and my hang y.“ ., stxrtedfaklngtbelmlweighedonlyfl pounds. WbenIhad finiabedlwclghed lzspoundsandwuatlllgaining-Inlept find, weary people blight nd un- fiu and my nervoumunllad all diap- getlc. Atyourdruggisfiinfbenewgh: peered. Iwebadnorccunulooofmyold ‘ ’ 50cc L 5‘ Pills. Trytbm. Ibeywillbdqill: glowofbulthtopalefacmnldmk: was a. visitor in stanley Bridge last _~_- ____. , I "w" En “- P'“"- m"- ready. If you have awife ore. L ‘ man you 1W6 Wm m“ it u a_ took her cue from hlsowrl demean- C‘ N!‘ £9‘ 00' The House of 8am? e , ye our. which was outwardly that of al 84 Queen Street London, E. C. t England Public Auction Sales anwmlruas Dreams-Come- True MargarBell Pedler CHAPTER II MADAME DE VAIHGNY Jean was standing looking out from the window of he;- room in Shipping bags will be furnish- ed without charge by applying to IL T. Holman, Ltd. Sum- mmide. P. B. L Ifwrcsented by Alfred Fraser, Inc. (Continued) Jean reflected humorously that this point of view had only occurred to him now that it chanced to con- existence." As if suddenly stabbed by the son triumphantly. “And dullness is after all, the biggest bugbear of 212 Fifth Avenue New York, N. Y. cide so admiraly with his own wish- es. Hitherto the England" o-o-o-eww lclllll-e "nlmmrliant P°51ll°11 l" the EYES TESTED ‘ wackground and Jean's attention focumcd more directly upon the "slfllely homes o! he looked round the great dim hall had bee" Yeleibled W’ 5 with a restless, eager glance, as palpable pose of his own remark, the light died oug; of his face and though trying to impress the pic- ture of it on his memory. . lottctown. ‘fBelrnfels-my ‘House of Dreams- unpleasing vagaries of the British oomeJrruefl he mlmered w hum climate. “I should like to g0 lo England," AND ‘ GLASSES FITTED E. W. TAYLOR J. S. TAYLOR. Optometrists 142 Richmond street self. _ He had named it thus in those “'35 8115"" Sald- first glowing days when love had Peterson smiled at hcr radlantly- tramfjzuxed me my,“ 01d border the 5mm! 0‘ l1 "bud wh° has 3°‘ castle, turning it into a place of igs own way with less difficulty mag“. V1510“ am; oonsummawd than it had anticipated. hopes. The whimsical name took its “You Shall 80-" 11° llflmll-led her-lorfgln from a little song which "You'll adore Stflple- 1V5 qullfi l‘ Jacqueline had been wont to sing llylllfifll °ld mill-sh mm°'*‘l*‘~w'“‘ to hlm, her glorious voice investing and terraces all wmulaie- "a" the simply words with B passionate down to the lust detail °f a WW belief and triumph. §§04$O§+F§§0 9 §§Q4GOQ4¥OOQQ4§§VO+OQOOQ Professional Bards Prohibition Commission Chas. H. Black, Chairman, Char- hcdgc." It's a strange road leads to the Jll. B. McDonald. Wesl- St. Petals. staple? L, that {he Byemmngl Home of Dreams’ John Simpson, Hamilton. pmce?» ‘To the Home o’ Dream5_c°me_ Send all information regarding Infractions of PROBIBITION AUI.‘ to the above or to B. J. Haywood. "God bless my soul, no! The True’ rormarlns acquired 1t when lhelum hills he bleep and in valleys came pushing over to England withi deep‘ the Conqueror. I lmulllue- M!" And salt with zebra the Wayfarer: married mice, you know. l-ler first. we”, Stewart 8. Lowther J. D. STEWART, K. C. the hotel abMontavan. In the dis- tance. the great white peaks of the alps strained upwards, piercing the mass of drifting cloud, whilst be- low lay a world sheeted in snow, the long reach of dazzling purity etched black trunlu against the whltncss and the steely gleam of c, frozen lake showed like a broad blade drawn from a white velvet scabbard. It had been part of Peterson's ex- pressed programme that before go- lng their separate ways he and Jean should make a. brief stay at Mcrltavan, there to await Lady Anne Brennan's answer to his let- ter. Jean had divlned in this de- termhlatlon an excuse, covering h's need to take farewell of that grave on the lonely mountain-side before he set out upon the solitary journey which could not fail to hold poig- nant memories of other, fonner wanderings-wanderings invested with the exquisite joy of “sharing each adventure with a beloved fel- low waylfaror. Instinctivcly though Jean had recognked the desire at the back of Glylfs decision to atop at Montavan, she was scrupulously careful not to let him guess her recognition, she husband, Tormarln, led her a dog's me waynnn_; ‘m; you lifc. and after his death she mar- rlcd Claude Brenflallfiiflll 0f I But there's sure a way to the House‘ jurfor blmch of the Bennans. Now of Dream,’ slle is a widow for the second time." To the Home of Dfggmg-comg- "And are there any children?" "Two sons. The elder is the w" We shall find it yet. ere the sun N. W. LOWTIIER BABRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC. 84 Great George Street MONEY T0 LOAN BELL & MATH IESON t. n. Bell n. 1.. Mathieson, LL.D. Barristers a. Solicitors Mme, u, Loan of the first marriage and is the ha‘ "t, l Charlottetown and Montague owner of Staple, of course. The y; we f"; ggfflghg on, come fihe,. younger one i; the child of the coc- come w”. MARK R. McOUlGAN BABRISTER, sou-enroll, arc. MONEY TO IOAN Cameron Block. C‘ arloflelown, BIL]. McLEOD a. asuiruzv J. A. BENTLEY W. E. BENTLEY, K. C. Barf-later and Aliorney-nt-Law . Ollce: 100 Richmond Street .. MON}! 1K). LOAN , ond marriage. I believe that since WgyfQfef‘__I ‘n4 W“ Brennan's death they a‘l three live Peterson's eyu rested curiously on very Wmloflublv @0893!" Bl 9WD"? h's daughtor’; face. There was aomol -at least, they did tm years ago thing mum‘ .151“; vufonafy’ in when I last heard from Anne. Thnt they, qu-et, gum; “m was not long after Brennan died." "one dgy, Jun," he said, "when Jea" ‘mnklm h" bmws- you meet the only mm who matters "Rather n confusing household wlBclrnfels shill b0 Wllfb-lhe hw-le be suddenly p tchforksd into." she where your drum ‘hm come mm wmmmlled- It's a house of Ihoqla now-a dead ___ um m dull!" lubmlttnd row-mm. But mm any m and ml u... FASHION HINT Doctor's Life - Work Continues to Benefit Thousands A brilliant Canadian Phy- sician. M.D., M.C., 1.11.0.8, Edinburgh, Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh post ‘graduate of famous European hospitals, and one time President of the Ontario college of Physicians and Surgeons, experimented for 15 years to find a medicine man merely travelling for pleasure, and she listened with a grim sense o: gnugemenl; when poor Monsieur: Vautrinet, the maitre d‘ hotel, re- cognising Peterson as a former, client, sympathetically recalled the] Isad circumstances of his previous lv‘sit and was roundly snubbed for his pains. To Jean the loss o_f her mother broken only where the pixie-woods] had meant far less than it would have done to a girl in more com- monplace circumstances. It was true that Jacqueline had shown herself all that was klndheartod and gen- erous in her genuine wish to com- which would act on the diges- tive and eliminativc organs at once. The successful result he named Frult-a-tives. If you suffer from chronic. constipation, poor stomach, kidney trouble, rheumatism. pass the girl's happiness, 5nd that bad complexion or sluggish I sense of the words had there been any interpretation of a. maternal of filial relationship. As Jean herself, to the huge entertainment of her parents, had on one occasion sum- med up the situation: "Of course I know I'm quite a. superfluous third at Beirnfels. but all the same, you two really do make the morn per- fect host and hostess, and you try awfully hard not to let me‘ feel de trop." But. despite the fact that Jacque- line had represented little more to her daughter than a brilliant and delightful personality with whom (Blwumllfl-n“! hBPlWned to have though Jean was intuitively aware brought her into contract, Jean waskh“ Sh, had come go mean mud, wmcwu‘ °l 5 ‘uddm “M” °l PM" more to him since her mother's, u her glance travelled scroll $119 death, even though it might. be] wld’ mum” °l "m" 5nd m1"! perhaps. only because she represent- “ 1"" t° ml‘ °“ m9 1M“ Wrlll ed g, tangible link with his past ground which lay hnlg hiqdm b9. happlnest | nentb the shoulder d: l hlll. She “mun; gsidg the dmlrcsfilon of “How high are we now?" asked the nervous passenger in the aero- 2 plane. l "About four thousand feet," said the pilot carelessly. "But I haven't started to climb yet." "I don't know whether I men- tioned lt before we started," qua- vered the passenger, “but I'm not 2 at all ambitious." 5n. {AI-Fifég. lnélllfiieiifllis} a less degree, could be alpplicd to "How to make my old short skirts confonn to the new length was a problem to mo until l hll on this plan. I dropped the hams: and H! "l8 m. that had been turned under was darker than the real, I redyed the entire dress. all" hi"?! ll"°ll.°d ' 1h; oodn, following directions m the lgiamond Dyfl Pickle- “I used Diamond D ca for the ggdycin , of couno. I ave dyed mmy flying with these wonderful colon. The have lived me many dollars and ave never fallcd to vs perfect results-smooth. even co on ._|‘]|\. to wear and washing. Friends think my thin are new when I redyo or tint i em with Diamond Dygg, ‘Iibeyrdo give the most gor- ul c0 on w - Mrscmlavlboulml Ibis:- l-lh W" may"! by an inunense though; conjured up by ller glimpse “WWW 0f “IN-mt Just the mere of mat quiet God's Acre, m h'gh “n” °l bififivfment which. thelup among the hills. she turned a-T clrmwml”! “mum "ll-"Pllly lllyfl bruplly from the window and made engendered: but something more bb- he; why dow-nstnin to the hoiol solute-a. some of all the exqulaltewcctibule. mntemal element which she had gem ghg digggvgrgd that my". mined in the woman who wu deattcon had been cllrmed by some ac And then came recognition of the queintancca. The encounter wag ob uselelnesa o.’ such regreat. Noth- vloualy not of his own choosing, fo' 'ng can! have made Jacqueline m Jean’; experienced eye, hlg m- other ghnn she was-one of the bore the slightly rflBl-lve exprcsslor world's great lovers. Muted to the common to it, when ‘clrcumstnncea man she loved, she B8lf8d nothing had momentarily 80¢ the better of more of Nature. nor had she herself h'm. ' Laurin; 2. Ruby Yeo; ll ,t, th .'I‘h llld i] fl ‘Incl Jean had been frankly fond of her V. hvzé‘ is réllflmeclg for 3e; 250° Yeo. tfizlzielgagflin?! :B;‘;”'I'I£fi_e n,‘ and attracted by her, bug in 110.] and 5m Au dfugglstm Grade IV-i’. 1. Donald Mac-j" 0mm, no; ,0 provlfl before hi»- Lcan; 2. Ethel Pye; Iiecllty. Lawrence Yeo; Isean. Ralph Farrell. ~ ' " - t ch Peterson's own attitude of detch- ‘M“"‘l°P8°u-'Muv Yeo. Charles YeopWofJd-B-dc and Evelyn Mayne, °" men, wwuds h“ daughter; algBetty Mandcrson. Mabel Farrell, era. CENTRAL LOT I SCHOOL 3mm. my; m. m, mung}; o; raovmcnor rrqlgcr: nnwm Fd°"‘“l”'" ' m». n-lss. Grade X-l. Willie Miller; 2. mggmgggy Maude Mandel-son; 8. May Yco. BEFORE TIE MASTER 0F Grade lx-l. luubel nnell; a. 3°!“ Clffln M IIIKOIII (Admlnlv lfl David Lecky: 3- Betty Mmdemn- of the perusal edible and efflecta 0 Grade VIII-I. Kenneth Mac-fMary A. McIntosh.) Complalnlnl Lean; 2. Gladys Yeo; 3. Leo Far- lfllglufilglgAg-Tblalllflfilaglglgfll: Ill ' roll and Roymond Farrell. Mum o‘ u” M“. “m” d,“ u, Grade VII—-l. Marian Munderaoml 1m, dly c: Ilchruary A. 11., 1932, I 2. Ada MccLaurin; 3. Annie Ram- HEREBY NOTIFY all pm»!!! l1" any i In; claims agnlnat the said gar! ' lntmh f M vvr ' Grade VI—1. Gertrude Lecky; 2. $1,... cat}; l: ,,,.;;;“g,,.,,,. 1, Urban Farrell; 3. Leota Ramsay. laud, widow, deceased, intlesitult.“ _ - 1h lr I11! Grade v 1. JBOk Yeo. z. notional xii-email: m: lgifgf" a‘; ,,fc",,,,,, , Lccky, 3. George Yeo. y“, chlmbenm ‘he Counmm , Grade IV sr.-l. Hazel Muc- chm-locum“. on Tuesday Ill 3. Gordon Twenty-ninth day of March A. B 8- Evelyn-will boblrred. Dafod "IQ mb any of PM" Grade m 812-1. Marian Farrell; ' A‘ Dflégydgi mar-run annexes. . Ruth Hutchinson. ' ' ' negmnn Grade n Jr.-\-1. Gerald Yeo; ,2. N. w. Lowrnnn. 3_ Marlo,“ MM” gczfalt-lggggtébollcllor. .____.» Grade II-l. Rhoda Lecky; 2.] _ lI-Trban nnbll. oeorse Yw- J Grade I Sr.-l. ‘Theresa. Farrell; ‘Yeo, Ruby YBO. Pf°W5° Y“ Don . Jessie Yco. did Maobean. Ethel Pve. hm" Grade 1 b——1. Alden Ramsay. Yeo. Gerald Yeo. Marlo“ Mam‘ Grade I c—1. Vclda Yw. Jame; campbell. Rum °‘""""° Perfect AIlGEIIdBHOOI——MGIJdCIThETGSB Farrell, Jessie Yeo. Vlvla PA L Lgxuropo “Auuonla" Mani! Pl "Antonin" Mani] "Alnunin" Man}! “Athonin" M11228 “Scythlfl Apr. 4 “Aunnh" Apr. ll Excellent Accommodation-Low Rama- aul “m. mm I on. ‘my mo. no mo. u» 8 15-" I Round trip all. " m. ' l9‘- Book through your local Aunt- No one can cave W" ""' ~ or CUNARD LINI 00x10 k Granville 8n. (B4159) " HALIFAX SIB“ l mlfhinl mum to give. And the (T036 Oillllflllcd) Manon-M’ ~