‘PAGE TWO :t~";v“;*"*"~" ~ a ii —— *-———/"‘ "jw‘_'l*__ VAPORUS assr FOIR‘ADULTS. too ' ' "Is this train all light for Bir- niizighiun, my man?" asked thc kind Old Indy. "Yes, mnniu, that's right," plicd the llllCitfili porter. "But are you sure it goes to Ilirixiingham?" she persisted. lie scratched his head and pon-. (Lred. " "Wcll,n11i‘ni," he informed her after a while, "the driver, the fire-f mun, the stationmastcr, the guard,’ anti the dining-car attendant all hill‘ ills going lo Birmingham, and Iin banking on them to know." In Bed For Weeks. 1'9- Illi»; Kenton Was Nervous and Anjivntic lnul m. Wiiiiiiziis‘ I link Pills Restored Ilcr Health _—._i.1- Experienced Wonderful r “I believe ii: is my duty to tell other suf-p Relief Icrcrs of the - _________i“ wonderful rc- ilicl I cxticrienccu from taking Dr. t fi/Villiams’ Pink Pills for anaemia," (svriles Miss Mamie Kerton, Bad- lJeros, Ont. "For three years I suf- fered from weakness, shivering and faulting spells, feeble pulse, poor appetite. I was nervous, restless and airways pale. I was in bed for weeks at a time, until I put Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills to the test. After taking . three boxes I was restored to my normal health." lliousands of other young women have been benefited, as Miss Kerton nvas. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills re- build health by actually creating an abundance oi new blood and in- creasing the blood cells, thereby restoring wasted tissues and revital- lizing the exhausted nervous sys- item. Growing girls are greatly helped by Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. Try them. 50c a package at your iiruizgists. Um,‘ Duo,“ Soyn: Do- n oak ' . - St. ‘Catharina, to Promote r D stroy: Basis F _ e C noel:;;'sl:lti5ti5;ells¢f{ Mini“ y M M“! Un‘ ---' feltI could scream. l-‘olioiiy "Ink-Id!!! Mupfjflfl A man I know said to me the I would just to,» and w _____ other day. “A girl of twenty u iglrll§_ glgiliitasmuéd _ THE Cl-IARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN '1! You've Reached " """.’-""~-‘*-“s*~"~=cv-r.~ce~w--r--- "l Could Scream I” What tho Fashionable: are Woaring Illustrated Dreasnialdng mason Furnished Willi Every Pattern Ru Annabelle ll’ ortlunpton The New Hollywood Theory of Obtaining Divorce to Preserve Perfect Friendship Defeats its Own End-We Use the Phrase ‘Friend Husband or ‘Friend Wife’ to Epitomize Successful Marriage, but This Happy Relation- ship is the Slow Growth of Years We used to think oi divorce as we did about a major operation a terrible ordeal, full oi suffering, that you went through in order to save your life when all other remedies had failed. Husbands and wives 8d . divorces only when one had inflicted some intoler- able wrong upon the other, and when dwelling i0- gether under the same roof had become unendur- able. It took infidelity, drunkenness, cruelty, ways. In those prehistoric days, maritaily speaking. now we have the modemistic point of view that divorce is the food oi love, and that. nothing pro- _motes harmony and good feeling between a mar- ried couple like separating. Leave ‘em and love ‘em, is the new domestic slogan. At least that ‘s the newest Hollywood theory about how to retain a husband's or wife's affections. For recently in that progressive, espec- ially matrimoniaily speaking, community, two distinguished married couples have got divorces for the avowed reason that they wished to keep their admiration and love for their mates, and felt that they had betler part while they were still on such good terms. No washing of dirty linen in public in these divorce ca is. Instead much spreading oi salvc. No blter CFIITlIIIxJOIIS and recriminations. On the contrary, husbands and wives vying with each other in flattering tri liutes. No gHZEII-OYGCI jealousy. No rcproaches’. N tears, No broker. 'hearts. "We are getting this divorce only to keep our irienfvhip," is the reason given by the high contracting parties for breaking their marriage vows. ' This way of looking at the holy estate makes us outsiders wonder. We have been in the way of thinking of the id=..il marilaig" as u sort of glorified friendship. We have thought that uihcn all the illusions t.‘ courtship had been swept away as so many discarded rags of chiffon, and when the fires of the passion of youth had burned down into the steady starvation, to bring them to the parting oi the l a decree absolute was the death knell of love, but ‘ mu“! onto, Bloc or Corumcal very young man or to m elderly man, who wants in go back to his g4 qflp wokcd rolled oats (thick) youth. But to a man of thirty five )6 cup flour. 1 ‘eupoon w]; to forty five, it i: the woman who 8 teaspoons baking powder. is past her first youth who nt- tracts." 1 tablespoon N881‘- 1 egg. _ l tablespoon shortening. '6 to 2 ta“ molasses. if. cup milk or water. Mix and lift dry ingredients. Beat egg and add to cooked oats which have been well mashed. Add melted shortening, molasses and milk, fold in dry ingredients. Bot- ter may be dropped from; spoon on a greased pm. or, put into muf- fin tins, or, baked as a cake. Bake in a moderate oven 25_ to 30 minu- He went on in explain that "lit- tlegirl" charm is all vely well. clear, high, ringing laughs and lightful, but youthfhl charm is a fleeting thing and a man wants something more than this. Sweet- ness and vital youth are all very lovely. They are like spring, they cheer and zladden and delight. But they don't last. A man oi 35 to 40 fa at his most ,atira.ctive and intriguing age, and m" it is here that the woman oi 30 Any thick left-over cereal may mres_ For n L! to h" m“ the be used‘ man gums for intelligent conversa- lon, companbnship and uderstand- QUICK non-nous m‘. The quickest way to cook pota- toes is to cube them raw and boll them. They can be creamed then, ii desired. D'gnliy and Poise The woman of 30 (I ought to say "girl" of 30, for this is what she is these _days) has a poise which So it is rather bewilderingand disheartening to learn that this old 'conception of friendship in marriage has been outmoded, and that the up-to-date ideal oi it is oi a tie s6 frail that. it carmot stand the strain of everyday living, but must be broken oil and the fragments locked away in a safety deposit vault if you want to keep it at all. In the colloquial phrase Friend Husband or Friend Wife we hav. 'epitor.iized. the happy and successful marriage. Into it we have packec all that we could say of congeniality, of sympa Hy and understanding; o. companionship between a man and woman. Must those endearing terms be used henceforth only to describe an ex-husband or an ex~wlfci Can you continue to be friends vtitn the partner of your bosom only if yoz. ure divorced? Perish the thought. 1 Oi course, we will all admit that the elss we ..ce of many people, the better we like them. This is true of husbands and wives as well as ‘ricnds and acquaintances, and father's and mothers and sister. and bro thers. In the fierce light that beats upcn the domestic circle we gei. too much oi a. close-up of each other, and the faults and blemishes that we would not notice from a distance often loom up so big that they ob- 810W 01-’ 856N110“. that the hfllllilvsi- thing that 6011141 happen '10 l1 m)!!! iscure all the beauties of the characters of those whom we are forced tc and woman was Just to settle down in A friendship in which each knew needed between them, and when each Sand memories o! Joys and sorrows Shared together. of battle! that they Undoubtedly many married couples could get along amlalily together a 118d ffillght 011$ 511N111" t0 5110111661". and in which each was so much a friends who fight like cats and dogs when bound together in wedlock, ‘fir. part of the others life that neither had any life alone. But this friendship between husb established in a day. It is the slow pend upon youth, nor beauty, nor wit, souls growing closer and closer together as life goes on. thing that seeks its own good all the time. sacrifice that puts the beloved ones good above its own. to a true and tried friendship. all oi the other's little faults and iweaknesses and loved them because they were theirs; when each knew w every turn oi the others heart and mind so well that speech was hardly was bound to the other by a thou- contcinplate at short range every day. Thus undoubtedly there are many men married to women who get o1; their nerves, who would find them most attractive ii they were anybodyis wives except their own, and many wives bored to tears by their husband who would find them fascinating if they only met them out at parties charming nndvmost desirable to n 27 cherubic smiles are all very "de-: L c _e p c r Si. “Everything I n“ ; nauseated me and there _was a heavy ache in the region of my ki _ When I awoke mornings ever would go black before my eyes. other told rn_e to use Dr. Piano's Favorite Prescription and it drove away all my ‘aches and pains and I Iclt as strong an , could be." iSold by druggisfs. , . . ».f'riil'..'l."d.ht'rf'l‘i‘klrtfii. 1"""' years and experience have given her-nag o. mature poise, but the sophisticated adorably dignified lit- tle manner which is so intriguing in a woman. she doesn't giggle, u I. her twenty year old sister does, at the slightest thing; her laugh is- quieter. She can talk, shc canar- gue with intelligence. She has a definite point of view, and, so long as she doesn't let this develop into a Cause (Oh, those women who _ make a fetish of some Cause), that ' point of view makgs listeners oi the men around her. The woman of thirty has learnt tolerance and understanding. She knows that one doesn't fly into a temper because a man keeps one waiting l0 minutes for some ap- pointment, through no fault of hi‘ own: nor does she pout half wa‘ through a "difference of opinion. She can sympathize with and un derstand other people's point o‘ view-and what man doesn't odor: the woman who can sympathizr without being sloppy’! For the girl of 30 ha' learnt the happy medium in all things. She doesn't rely on pretty-pretty way.’ and big, wondering eyes to charm a. man. Her ways are more subtle and more sure! Bcsdes, she is at f. acted by a more intelligent, more ‘ntcresting man than her little sis‘ 2r is, and since like is a magnet t0 iike, it is the interesting, the rath- er lntrguing man who is attracted to her. so, though you are past. 30, you have as good a chance oi marriage is any girl of twenty and you haw a. better chance go attract intelli oni: men. l Don't because you were thirty rial with as. yard of 10-inch lace. No. 703-Pantla Frock. This ntylo is designed in sizes 2, 4 and 6 yearn, Nmwfr-For Smart Junior. This style i: designed in sizes 8. l0. 13 and 14 years. Slu 8 will!!!“ 3 it is easy to appreciate the virtues of ands and wives is nothing that is growth of years. Nor does it dc- nor physical attractions. It is two Nor is it some- Its very essence is the self- with ours. But this fair weather friendship association is a poor thing, not worth for the love of a husband or wife who bargain. their petty vices and whose wills and interests do not come in conflict and delusions for its existence and that cannot stand the test of daily ho other wpek, think that you‘! marry any man rather than no one because you so dread the ids", oi a long lonely life. Time enough t< think of marrying without love when you're over forty. And ever. then one hears of very beautlfu marriages. There was that of Rd bert Browning and Elizabeth Bar- rett, for instance. those who do not irritate us with that has to depend upon illusions having, and those who trade it off belongs to them have made a poor DOROTHY DIX. lrcquirea 4% yards of 39-inch mate- yardntoi 89-inch material with if. yard of 39-inch contrast-inl- No. out-A Smart Alma,- Th1» tylo is designed in aim Imoll- sodium and Ime- TM mull I!“ equires 2% yards of 89-inch mate- ‘nl with 8 yams of binding. No. EAL-Lovely Day Wear. This :ylo is designed in sizes 1a. 1B. =0, rears, as, 88, 4o and 42 inches bust neasuro. Sim l6 require: 3% yards '.' 39-inch material with l5 Yard oi i-inch contrasting. No. 438--For Matrons. This style is designed in sizes 36, .38, 40, 42. 44 and 4d inches bust measure. Sim 36 DOMINION 0F CANADA Size 4 requires 2 yards of 89-inch material with 56 yard of 32-inch contrasting and 2% yards of ruli- ling. Price of Pattern I5 cont: in temps or coin (coin preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. Size-...................... Name Street Address City State Periodic- Eye Examinations Don't wear your glasses for flvo or in: years, as some do, without via-examination, for in that time serious changes Aro vitally important. ther one’: eyes are good or otherwise. who- may take place, which if not discovered, may work per- manent injury to the moat precious scnso you possess. Guard your eyes. ii. F. HIJTCIIESOII OPTOMETRIST , Proiossionai cards Stewart d’. Lowther ~ J. l). STEWART, If. C. N. W. LOWTIIER. BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ITO 84 Great Georgo sari-o; MONEY TO LOAN McLEOD 8i BENTLEY J. A. BENTLEY W. I5. BENTLEY, K. O, Barrister and Aitorncy-nl-Llw MONEY TO LOAN Ofllcc: 180 Richmond Street ZORA 7 The Invisible § J.B..W'ILMOT CHAPTER VI BLAYNE EVOLVES A THEORY Inspector Webster was seated in his ofllco at New Scotland Yard with a. sheaf of papers on his desk in front of him. They consisted mainly of extensive reports made by his subordlxiatts into the life of Montgomery Gaynor. The case presented so baffling an apearance that he felt it imperative that, a thorough investigation should be made in order to discover some pos- sible clue u to the motive for the crime ior, in spite of the incon- clusive medical evidence in which the actual cause of death was doubtful, Webster was convinced that there must certainly have been foul play. Bu; just how and why remained as much a mystery as ever. From the reports he had received Gaynor had always been n highly respected man. l-Io had been gener- ous to s. degree with his wealth and his name was to be found in almost every charitable subscription list. lie had been born in Liverpool fifty-eight years ago of middle- clau parents, his father having been employed by a well-known firm of cotton brokers. After leaving school he had been apprenticed to the cotton business, but this not. . [took the QPDOrtunity oi his father's death to cut adrift, and coming mi London he had entered the firm of Wardle and Grayman, diamond mer chants. His almost uncanny genius for business give him that fillip to in- ilividual enterprise so often denied the young man of only average :- bility, und 1t was not long after this cmmwd 1°’ “n m” lmswpflm‘ u‘ ma; he eswbl-shed himself’ in a the office and though I was firm- modest way, as a diamond dealer. |ly ‘mnvmced lb” everything W” 50m to suoce“, Montgomery not right, I'm damned if I'm not Gaynor had flourished exceedmfly beginning to doubt whether death and m the ma“ o, twenty yo“; was not duetonaturalcauseslknow side and filled his pipe. "Well, Peter, I'm stumped," he announced, as Biaync drew a chair forward. “Gaynor seems to have been a paragon oi virtue. I can't get hold 0i anythng likely to yeld the faintest clue. I've satisfactorily ac- lhe had bemme a power mung h“ I'm at variance with you there. but kmd_a power m business m” w“ factsare facts, and theer's no es- admircd as well as envied by his “ping “om them", less astute and capalfe rompetit- "nut may be: mm“! mum! m‘ curiously, "but when you've heard my end of the story I'd like to bet In business he was as hard as the anything you like that you'll chance precious stones in which he dean- W" Willa" a man whose will was iron and‘ T!“ WW3 m“ PM!“ ‘mm m‘ whose word was low. Ho found 9W3” i3" Bu? °1 P1P" °n which little 113g 1o,- senfment in m; “m. was written that. one word ZOR-A. duct of his trading. The weak must and WW1) he h" ‘llswl/"ed b" always bow before the tumultuous “nth I)“ empty 3"" in the dead energy and superim- ‘bimy o; the man's ofhoe, and passed it over the strong, and Montgomery Gaynor i168! WWI-Ids Webllbf- was the strongest oi them all. Then h; proceeded lorolcte the Yet he was respected. There was peculiar oo-incidenco of the name as he had laid the evidence on one w“ customary 1°’ his r°°m t“ be | not a. merchant; either in the cloist- cr of Hutton Garden or tho wider arena of Rotterda who would lay ill of him. All were in agreement in admiration of his ihidoubtcd gen- ius. He had travelled widely-not ior pleasure but because he bel7ev- ed that success is built upon tho foundation oi knowledge, :nd it was first that little extra. knowledge over' and above that possessed by one’: rivals that stabilised and lubstmt iated the success already won, Twenty two years ago he had associated as it was with the squat ebony Indian idol be had recently purchased. When he had flushed and furth- er related hi; analysis of the uh he had also found, Webster was looking puzzled. "I admit it's queer,"_ho sold at length. still toying with the scrap of paper. "But for the life of me the two." "No more can I," Blnyne admit.- I can't see any connection between 2 Stop Using Soda! I Bad For Stomach Much soda disturbs digestion. For tidied up. For this purpose a woman cleaner was engaged. I have seen ner," went on the young man, "and she assures me that on this partic- ular day the grate was quite clean. zgrbgtttzrifagl?‘eaggsegfihéfilgexglgfi ‘i? In fact, she went over the llnoleoum bowel poisons which cause gas and mmediately in front of it with a bad sleep. Hughes Drug 00., Ltd. mop, and she saw no trace of Had she done so she would, of‘ course, have swept it up. Further than this she says that Gaynor was BMW“ deductmm with m‘ “cm” not m the ham o, burning any tamed kcenncss. As the young man flung m the gum at ML had proceeded he had carefully ' been weighing up every point ad- "The next ‘step is equally lmnort- vanccd, and at the conclusion he 'ant. The clerks in the outer office was forced to confess, in the light |are emphatic on the point that no of Blayncs discovery, that it was communication came for the chiefinot only masonable but also ex- that afternoon. In fact, on that day tremeiy probable. all the letters received by 90st were The Inspector leaned forward and 0! a bllfllflfis Xlllllffi ind. lclwfdlfl! handed back the piece oi paper to 'to oillce custom, they were opened Blayne. In readiness for Gaynor‘: arrival at the oflloe at fen-thirty. Therefore, either he received this letter at hi: home address and brought it to the office, or else-and I consider this ‘mom likely to meet the case-he re- ceived it in some way we have yet to discover during tho time ho was out at his lunch." | (To Be Continued) Blayne paused for o moment to" light his pipe. Then he proceeded. “You see, Webster, if he had re- ceived that letter at home. and its contents wen o: important as we naturally assume they were, the chances are that he would have dc- stroyed it in the morning and not in the afternoon. Therefore he must ‘have received it between 12.15 and .30. "But I am not relying entirely “id- "M 1"": 11°?- WI- m" I'm l upon hypothesis in this connection. being altogether to his liking. be tractive woman nnd daughter of a MissGwynneth F. Coombs TEACHER PIANO. rnaony, SIGHT. ncsnmc 40 Victory Ave. Phone 883-1.. 5697-9-l4-wsm-l-mth. Prohibition Commission Chas. H. Black, Chairman, Charlottetown. Jas. B. McDonald, West Si. Peter: John Simpson, Hamilton. Send all information re dl _ VJQRKQ _ Infraction: of rnomairiolvusg "wvmuucmlmyui I. ‘mggeimm “W”! "m" °' ' I m" m" mm“! l "l" ""11"" lo the above or to possible motive. in, and I have found that during nuns of Zora." Irnoofou-Llrmlll-I-l. Btorfllunocumnouuoodifimoiupbqgmmgimgg . L, A "r 1 "P: ~4- 4, ,: 7.5» i, ‘pk’ ‘a ‘ A, West county inkeeper at whose old- world establishment he hmd fre- quently spent what leisure was per- mitted lilm during the stern de- mands of business. Prom Mrs. Ony- noi-‘s testimony Webster ncluded that. the diamond merchant had been a model husband and a de- voted father, in fact the mom ho analysed thg mass oi facts before him the more obscure became lny pnues Siood, Repaired, Alford. Mode 0n: hto New» clfllldr 0| In Pay tho Yfilllifl married Elaine Somcrville, an at- groai believer in coincidence my- iwhm 1 m“, my gufygy on m, self. Ono thing l: fflrly obviousnqgh, yo,“ can“ m, m, I gound PROVINCE 0F PRINCE llblVAllIl ISLAND I IN THE SURROGATN COURT IN THE MATTER OF TH ESTATE OF‘ Josiah Carmody, Into oi Chur- lottetown, .in Queen: County, de- ceased, intestate, PUBLIC NOTICE is hecrby given pursuant to Statute that the herein- niter particularly delcrlbed lands wii ho lold by public auction on vh» premise: on Thursday the third tiny of November A, D, 1932 commencing at 2 o'clock I’, iii. The said nulo in (made pursuant to n license to cell real estate issued herein by tho Hon- ornhlo Harold .I.. Palmer Surrogate and Judge of Probate fon iii: laid Pro- vince and which uid Licenn was Kfllgélgnalfzh! 28th dny of September. The following loud: will be not up and sold: tint i: to any ALL that (not; piece and parcel of innd nitunir lying and being in the Common of County. bounded and described u follows: Commencing on the louthweot :lde of Pnrk semi at n point one hundred and twelve (112) feet nnutheutwurrily from it: Junction with Konaington Bold: thence nonthvvut parallel Willi uid Konnlngton Rood one hundred and twelve (112) feet, nix (8) inchen; thine: n right logic: noutheut por- nllol with Pork Street u dlluncc of at right forty-five (i5) i angle: norihusc purnilel Konaington Road n distance oi one hundred and ivvolvo (I12) foeg nix (B) inchu to ih: southwest nido of llllfl Pork Strut: thence norlhvveniwnrdly along tho noulhwut nido of Park Street - n _di:i.:nco. of forty-fin (iii) feet to tho place of commona- moni Tho uld land will be cold free from encumbrance: nnd whoever will give JIIIIII OAIIOI)! ADMINISTRATOR of tho Billie and lilffoci of Ionian Cgrmodv- Pnlmcr A lrarmor, Charlottetown, SOLICITORS. MTU-IO-I-mou-ii FOR _§_AL I oflor my property for lalo of b Four pair Wild Cicuo broken ‘tether. Shot over Four Years, prloo $0.00 per pair. FOR SALE House, barn and lot on the cor nor of Upper Queen Street nnl Chestnut Street. For further par ticulars apply to J. A. MacDonald Solicitor, Riley Building, Chur- iottetown. 5825-10-14-3 a FOR SALE to Post Office Box 669, Fredericton, N. B. 10-15-91. AUFTION SALE 0f puro bred Jersey Cattle ll Stephen Holroyd, Winaloo Bond. H milo from Winsloo Station '~ MONDAY, ocronnn mu AT 2 017L068 SHARP 1 pure brad Janey Bull i you! old-choice animal. thoh molt lhnll have preference on 7 c“. m out r :: a, "Dated thl: om do! of sentember. 1 11¢ WW- D- . 1 two year old Boiler. l Heifer: one you old. .1 Calf four month: old. 0 1 Draft Coll 1% your: old. 1 Foal four months old. Term: at ule. ALEX MoBAlu Aucllouoo ml-io-lo-cmwi-Bi. consisting of on: hund- rod and kn non: of land or». mot nod form imminent:- NOTICE! Some time before his death Gaynor received n letior written in green ink. wine inn letter contained we don't know. But I'm inclined in think it must have been something important otherwise there would have been no object in his destroy- lnl it the way he did. "We do know that Gaynor went out to lunch It 12.15, grid that ho returned shortly after two o'clock. within tho rim of tho oxidised curb a spent wax vests which tallied will: thou found in the dead man's pockets. If ohoinvelto lud been there in tho morning the cleaner oould not have missed seeing it when one entered upon her mid-day duties at twelve-thirty. What wo have got io do now is, if possible, to. cgnng himself-or herself-by the I iweintchodboonfiniogio .. .u.r.,, Sailing on moonlit of poor bacilli. IIALOOIM Olilllflgfli I. Obi. 184i. 'IQ ‘EYE TRIED _ 1 IND otsssns FITTED .1. I. ‘IAILOI W. TAYLOR l 1U limit rnmcii nowAnn ILAND HOSPITAL 1H8 CAMPAIGN IUND All ubocrlborn in nrrurl l" hereby uoilllod that the Oomrllll Ind of 1m l: being ololoil. 0v‘ lobar Si, 198i. Payment: will rooolvod at the Canadian Bank Oommoroo or at the Seer! ‘ Oflioo of. Prince ldvnrd Illa‘; Ioopllcl, Charloilolovvn, Pr!!!" word hind. um-io-iz-i-t.