‘ PZACE TWO Daughter: You'll have to give me away when I marry Tcm. Father: I have already ttid hin~ how extravagant you are and ht Isn't discouraged yet. ANOTHER FACE Upstairs our ice man doesn't tro‘ S0 oft nevi/it's grey-m colzi; We're glad of that--i1is face 1s no‘ A! Ice face to behold. “I'm going to ask the boss for I raise in salary the first of the year.” A "But suppose he refuses." "Oh well, I'll ask him again ncxl year.“ Bessie! What do you think oi higher education? Bert: it's all right. except ll‘. the colleges where they let it takt up too much time from football: practice. 4M1]. ES-i I J01... p tons» l. - By Concordia Merrel (Continued) show of! m he svemvd vonlvul 1°, "To loll the truth is sometimes maintan a oondxion of nc1urul:ly.| the greatest sort of pluck. wmn Armed neutrality, pvlllill“. 1M1 11°‘ you telling me that you-love me did not make that too obvztulii 11281117" Sometimes. and 1t l‘éllllfl‘l' bClflidcr‘ ' She caught a breath, sharply. He ed her, they scculcd to be ulmosi had asked it so quietly; so coolly; friends. At tilcse times it was lul- h's sombre face unchanging, po55lbifi 1o believe that he “T15 11101‘ “Ne? she said, "I hadn't meant ting revenge against her and MYS- whnt I said to tell you that." impulsively, one tiny. sill? 5119119 11115 “But it did." thought lo him. uzlcl he answered “T"r-11 there was no pluck in it," instantly". v rho said unsiuntliiy. "Because there‘ “I'm nof. I'm 011 h. ilolidzllfi b11111‘ was no intention in it." ‘I'm on a lioneyiuoon." “None the less. it told me the, “So yve can mil 11 truce wh le t? lrutil. didn't it?" he insisted. ,'—honcymo:11- "" silo asked. Slu- w as tculptcd 5o deny it. He “Yes: if ytu l e to 11111 11 111 saw" the round, emphatic “No" way," he said. And tha: same d: iforrlug on her lips; saw it die, while they were out riding togct‘. '11, as she flashed o. look at er, he looked at herWa great deai lhiln and asked: and out of a ion‘; 51101116 531d 511(1- i "lluve you 1111;; right to ask such deny: p, question, Jim?” “I'd liked to rldc as well as you “Probably not," he answered do, Lucy.” smoothly. "But you sad yourself "I've ridden all my llfs," she an- ilhut it was best to have things swcred, as thev trotted ther horses shun-r bcfiuccn us. And, anyway I down a leafy lune. ykn: 1 "I haven't. Working men don't ‘IID\\'?" That was little more than cct the chance." he Snid- in. whisper. She glanced a: him quickly. “You told me lo-dny when you "I've never known you without can!‘ to 1113.‘ nrlns i11 the storm. 11101111’ 0f 111111111’ - - #110 SL131 . lle broke off and watched the slowly. "It's dfiicuit ‘.0 picture you color spread from her throat sheer . . . pool‘ . . -" > to i1r-1- gold hair. Shepushed back He shot hcr a (1111911 1011K» 111161 i1 hcr 611.111 and rose abruptly. queer smile twisted 1111 1111s. Ho looked up at her, unmoved,’ "If I had come to you poor; a "Y 111 would not have come to workman; W°1l1<1 F011 1111"? - - '3" n for the storm, even 116 bmkl.‘ off. ' 1 had been ten times "That isn't playing fair, Jim,” . you hadn't loved me, she protested quietly, mlswering h: Lucy?" look. "All the same. Ill tell you: I .1 still, confused and think I wuld- . 11 looked down at 111m, He colored slightly and said 110th- 1- ing more until they reached the 511g @1195 m a 19w vows common. Then he said, with a _ _ _ 115mm Q1 ymp _ _ _ change of voice. v p-i right to question mo! “I wllnt in rdc well Tell me "1 . .:1 i1» . . . badger we . . “'111“'1‘ I 13o \\'1'1>11r'. TM"?!- i1' I'm {:0 1 1.; 11 (‘Llltliil tremble i‘- 111; 11- 1H .1 11191". l _l‘ m‘. V» l?) ‘l ‘i ill: lose now and came to hl-r. 11-“- 1\'<‘11 C15 it 6-111 1J8 dolllfl" 1 .511: her shoulders and made her 5110 100K911 at him curiously. 11nd p01; at him [then n11 around her. Not a soul in "Anti-Aver me, tilcn; and '1 u-Qnt" sight. ztud lhe nearest houscs were he sail "You do love me, c1011‘: 1119"‘ (13511 illc EITSMIYWB. you '1 ,1 "Ride past and I'll watch," he somehow; there was something in Suggested. This 10d t0 11 rcglllill‘ his absolute, blunt directness that 1081011. and for hall an hour he mlltli} anything possible. She 1ook- llhlte gravely let himself be coach N1 m, her Hug“ fad-mg ;cd by her. He was tflllllfiltiflllsiy in 5:1,“; (“messed through earnest, which made her cnmest. 111$ Hi5 hands m her too, and while that lesson lasted. ‘shoulders tightened for a moment, Per-WINK questions seemed for- lhrn dropped from her; and: ‘K011911- "Wlly couldn't youi tell me at. "Y°11'l'9 l1 Slllvndld Sent." she told h1g1» he said. as he went back h‘m at the conclusion. “But you to 11,5 ma“. would just have a, lighter hand . I 5m cmndyft 1181p laugh. at that; . ." They discussed it together for but u. W115 shaky little sound, and 11 111th “b119- shc slipped brick to her place at the1 “Wmll 1 5"‘ 511111 1111.1’°11<‘ 10511.1’ tflblp‘ 1m. 95.05 steadfastly down knows, I want to gct their iznoyv- 111:: uitc-r a moment she looked up ledge? 11° 5111111 115 111011‘ "i1? 0h ll- suclrlt-lry 1111a said: 11mm | on,“ conveys me _ _ _ rather] She though over that; it was a . ‘wholesale . . . back into your new 1.91115 ‘"1 111111- Shopkeeper: I always try t1 i1111ds,docsn't it?" “I suppose," she titéughi. “he's gauge my customers. Customer: not you can gouge them, eh? To see whether 01 m, ghmod at has always shown ‘that CwilCCiliTfliiJll ayes‘ I suppose it doesl-i he an. and earnestness o\.r cvcryfliwirlg swcrrxL lhes ever done, big or small. . . "I mean you can use that know_1lt's that that's . . - sort of turn- Wqm to he“, your revenge _ _ _1- ed to pose" in him and filled him Fmwwmmyoiqmdqgigyf) catioclc. slur “r111 on, n hint o.‘ tears in the‘“l1 ‘V1111 11170 - - 5111‘ WM s11 1d‘ ,,.,,,.d_,._ ‘deep in it, 111.1: she shin 110111111 AND Q “I . , . suppose I can," he 531d more. More and more ‘as the day: (“A5555 pfffgu g SiOl\‘iy_ wen by wns she reallhng his sld _ g, w. 111111.01; There was s lence after that. °1 111° imgflllfl 11 “'85 no areumcn , ~ J, s. '1‘.-\y_|,()1; I; Bu. as hr as She could judga he lo say that another man cou‘d hm.‘ "2 ggzffié':lamgn_fl_t 11111110 no use 0i the knowledge at 111m" 1111011131 $11011 111.1 ‘t an . 1 Fill? wgoaumam] nii. He could have made of it a. “me ‘"11’ °1 111 111111 195-5 Professional Cards STEWART & l.()\\"l'lii~lit 1.1). srcwliln 1t c. N w l.l1.\"111: s: Baltltlsrl-tns fifllllllllllri CH‘. 84 Grral Grnvlzv- §lrlwl MONEY l0 IMAM McLEOI) 81 lli§f\i'i‘l.EY J. A Hl-INTLEY W. E. l1l1J.\"l'l.El' K C. Barrister rim! Itltnrnrv-nlllslw Office: H!!! ltil-ltlnnnd Street MONhY T0 LOAN IvIcDONALD & McPH FIE J. A. McDONALIi Barrister Attorneys, Etc. ‘- MONEY TO LOAN a Riley Building 4134-5-20-11110-11311‘ ‘er: BELL & MATHiESON B. R. Bell. I). L. liilnlhlvsnn, Li. Ii Barrister 81 Flnlicltnrs Money to Lown Charlottetown and Montague -—--—— -~ »------- MARK R. McGUlGAN BARRISTER. SOLIFITOR ETC. MONEY T0 LOAN Cameron Blnci. Charlottetown. P.E.l. W. E. DARBY. Lil. l! Barrister 1b Snilrlior *~ Dalton Ilulldlng. Summerslde, l’. E. l. MONEY I0 LOAN ‘II. F ‘VlrPlIEii torment to her. but he didn't. He 5° 5119111" "1511 111111115- But illl ‘had “mung the admission from her, “'15 1101 1111011191‘ mall; he was til and that apparently satisfied him. 1115 mmpP-‘1‘1m15 111-111 111111 11111 ll-_~ 1111i l; v11 through her horror 111"“ 11111110 11‘111i 11111 l1‘: wuki l1 of hi: 111-; . ls, and so he was now 19k“ 111111111112 11111111132 ‘V1111 ‘H {'0 n‘l appoitrallces, satisfied W111i 111511 111119 T111111’! 1<"-"- ll 511v h." ‘q;;.¢;q,;~,._ 1 just givru him, had Hvsorbrwl 111; m they were out “nib utterly‘, while it had iwiwl, )1 m1}. linked his an“ hud given such Fill-W‘ ;"g‘1§1(_ln 1- pmfig, m...“ and Said 0105c to he, wilat she hud tnirl him znld 11:1 ~: , 50 EITPVOIy and purposefully tried t 1-598 ma; man at the mp o! the carry out her minutcst instructuil vlllflf’? Well. he ciwns the place next 111111 11» Wfillld almost have bow Ito 1111111". It will look convinengiy “m”? 11nd 11 “11-1“"11 1"'5 "llfllrii lbie-fup if “.9 pass mm arm_;n_flrm_ lcss true '0 him; less pzlrt of 111.. 'petl and kissed her forcheadinba. .11 "Mum S119 1°1111¢1 11015011 think- . . And another time, when he‘ 1-113: was 20111! out by hllnself, he amp-l Ipcd and kissed her forehead, end' i ‘In-hon she raised her face, quickly,‘ islaructl. w 111s. he said in p whlspfi (. (To Be Oonttnued) "Miss Smith is simply mad on thc Sllblect i)! genus, and sterliizes or “Mm Jebb ,5 in sight You h,” filters everything in the house!" mm, the tom“ remembers. ; "How does she get along with her She did remember. and in oon- husband?" Fmqumce had mom,“ w sun ‘Oh, even their relations are strained!" INSTALMENT XVI ' But when there was no one to NOTICE n“ ANNUAL MEETING i C. M. Lampson £1 Co. LIMITED. i 64 Queen Street , London, F. C. l. England ‘Y; Public Auction Sales ‘ 0F 1 HAW I-‘l RS l Vhlppln-g hag! will be furnish The Annual Gcncrnl Meeting of the Charlottetown Driving Park and Provincial Exhibition Association will be held in the Secretary's office, Provincial Building, Wednesday, January thlrtccnth, 1932, at i111: hour azm-z-ll-zuemuruslun. "l Wlllwvl chum hv 111111111111 of 2 p. m. l). EDGAR SHAW, K. C. nwikmm, b 51 -, l!" 051w! - P1111158 "iflfl- ' y lt will be ncezsrary ta a: 1 the - . _ -.. 1 or . In fivfflg°gnjifizgkg1§}_"':2;_‘;; "m" “hfgd it rasey‘ Inc. above 1:1:ct 11': t) a l.1‘1\r d1’ ~ .1.l- Collection m lllllc lspecm nept. BAI-‘E protection for all dmumentl. ; Charlottetown, l‘. E. L ,1 :11 111th Avenue 111.". tic r: Mn min, N \ .-....__,,“ '”' " IIFLZ-"i-csd-Cl. Gresham ’s Girl l ‘marked increase. In the period 11911-13 before prohibition the fl- THAT THE PEOPLE MAY KNOW (A column of lnterelt to all rec ,, accepted fact: and worthy opinions regarding the place o! alcoholic beverages ir. modern life; as well as new: ol he progress of the cl-mpalg fo n “dry” world.) Sponsored b! the Grand Division, Sons of Temperance- " P. E. I. IIE BACKGROUND 0F THE INLAND VOTE ON PROHIBI- TION Finland has voted to repeal the rohibiiion law now tn existence. omethlng of the reason for that ition may be gathered from the ilowing, taken from an impart- l analysis of the report of the jorkenheim Committee which J35 appointed by the government to investigate the situation from c. temperance view-point, and to report. Nov. 30, 1931. The Committee issued a cam- pnrison of figures showing con- victions for drunkenness since the coming into force of the dry-law‘, and before. These showed n gures stood at 15,111; in 1923 there 1930-31 furnished by the police Violations of the liquor law increa- sed from 10.561 in 1910 to 27,217 in here also a halt in the progress- lon missions to mental institutions by 1929 had reached the peak of 24.- 8 per cent. for men, and 6.4 per cent. for women. (Alcohol seems to be pretty well at the» root of their insanity anyway) gurcs states. "Although it may not be possible to affirm that the use of alcohol under prohibition in- creased yet the results of this use during the last ten years have be- come 1no1'e harmful than former- Said report wns filed on ‘h’? show a decrease. Tllese figures can only be explained by the EYE-ll" . Bflveflly 01' the enforcement, and! the stricter definition of drunk- enness" since 1923. The offences committed by ln- dividuals under alcoholic influ- ence huve increased also. From 1904 to 1913 (wet) they represent- ed 53 per cent. Prom 1920 to‘ 1929 they represented 59 per cent. 1929. The figures for 1930-31 show The Committee reports that ad- Quality has substitute The mistake was made in belle- ving that because during the strike ' The Committee from these fl- m 1905 prohibition had gwen 399d ' results that it would do so during normal times. 1 one member °1 the c°mm1t1°e' offers to assist a limited number ol I Mr. V. J. VlrtB-net} 1111111118 that 111° ‘fishermen from the Maritime Prov- 3 Committee worked from a precon- lnces to attend the Short Course for . ceived standpoint; they first wrote Fmwmm i" 11¢ 51"" l" 11"’- nih‘ I l their proposed new law, and then N‘ S" during“ “rm o’ s“ “was . . . . W°T1<9d ‘m a "W"; 1° 11151113’ 115 ieommenclng on January 27th, 1932. The responsibility 1s placed upon proposam the smuggling of liquor, which ls the essential problem. It ls also de- plored that liquor ls openly sold in Cafes without exciting public indignation. The conclusion to be drawn is that the law no longer posses popular support. The offl- wcre 35,916, and in 1929 there were cials themselves dissatisfied with 111,157. The provisional figures 101 the law. 11nd feeling they are n01 bucked by the people, fall to make the necessary effort. (Neither all, nor any part, o! the course the sum of Forty-five which proves that a law backed by P111711‘: °p1m°n “ndvpmperly enm" fax and the railway station nearest ced, will not prohiblt)-from a. dl- M, hmm on“, ham, m], flghnfmgn gest of the report, Dr. Hercod, ‘from 17 to 35 years of aqe. who have Laussane. A public enemy is an evil "1811 obtain these grants. All applications who gets rich with the loyal sup- lrmlst be in by Janunrv 15th 3nd port and assistance of good citl- ‘hflllld be addressed t» Fisheries Z9118. COURSE FOR FISHERMEN The Biological Board of Canada cries Experimental Station, Halifax, J2“ Primes“ ine 5 x 7 I-I Each will be given on completion of dollars plus the amount of railway fare for a return trlp between Hall- pasaed through grade 6 In the put-lie schools of the Maritime Provinces or an equivalent grade will b. ab], u, Dept. C. Experimental Nation Halifax, N. s Jan. 4-5-8-91. _ {odau pictures, w; loll our finishing will give ' rgement free. vlth each roll of film mailed .0 us for Developing and 5111111111 Enclose Postal Note or 45o. with any size Ipolurel film and receive d; lcturen finished "The N" '11!" and one enlarged to x 7 size free. Mall us a trial ller and he convinced of the Ialltv wi- lmt m the work nenty-four hour service ‘HE REID STUDIO MonetomNB JIIIII-III lei: i i i beginning HUDSON now builds Hudson and Essex Cars- ; IN CANADA HUDSON Motor Car Company an- nounces the formation of Hudson-Essex of Canada, Limited, a new great Cana- dian industrial enterprise, located at Tilbury, Ont. Under this name Hudson and Essex cars —the two superb Pacemakers of l932— are being manufactured on Canadian soil, by Canadian workmen, in a modern motor car plant now established and operations. This is a new Canadian large-scale opera- tion in fact as well as in name. During the new year before us, this factory will supply the total requirements of all Hudson and Essex distributors and deal- ers throughout the Dominion. Canada can thank its own motorists for this latest addition to its brilliant roll call of industries, for there are now on its far-flung highways a total of more than sixty-five thousand Hudson and Essex cars. 1 By this new factory in Canada, Hudson . shows its appreciation of and recognizes its obligation to this vast army of owners and also expresses in a genuine. and tangi- ble. way its earnest desire to become an important factor in the Dominiolfs future prosperity. IIMore than ever, in the weeks and months ahead, the people of Canada will have many good reasons to “Watch Hudson - which means Essex, too.” - HUDSON MOTOR CAR COMPANY DETROIT, MICHIGAN HUDSON and JANUARY 9. 1932 . § AWILIRGEMEIIIS- FR EE ! A0 Introduce to 1s 1i