‘ PAGE EIGHT rvwvv v v qrtls“ Realm .-:- Soc _ m... _ .._....... THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN vwvv ial ‘anm M AA‘;‘A AQAAA AxTALAAAAJA BOOK FRIENDS restful friends, who gently tlikfi Our 11rd Prom off our souls the vveizlit care. or loneliness, of dull despair: While they lead us through twill-i 0f light. IX.- rsalms of lzeautl’ “"1 d ugh“ ':i lint. enchanted. bissilli >181!‘ We hold commun on with the great No one rs-proaciuw, nollc derides. Hui rvcry s11! in_1is’c?nll<l£’$- Dur cars-s slip 0ft‘ and fire 8W8)’; Dull n chi is chzulgfd W 41mm)“ (lay. fig 5m gwgy benuuibed and tirvdi But we return refrcsbed, inspired. Sn. when a Ch..stmas gift wr ‘ choor/s. Which IICVQ.‘ can iiS PQWPT 115° To charm 11nd uttsrtnili, we send A clear boo‘: triond unto our friend. 4.51m 39x1 wr-Kzbbln :n “Christ- mas Crackers" . ' hands. and bid us shake of COIFFURES SPARKLE HITII NEW’ ORNABIENTR coltiurtn- hint-dill‘ chi , Nit-xv winter . " There are ul’. s 11s cf l. =liiny gadgets t0 adorn a . and ivhotlier or not your hnir {y i. fuir, you'll do well f0 100k hi l"..- ncw hair dross ornuuwuta {louc- arc the clay.- when _\ _ - cw fired tzyulg to tilsten a little wcll- ‘d piCC‘ illlO the bun on 122- back, of yflur llPCk. The new evrnixig coil- m.» ricccs- . vs stay _iu<: who"? ynll put rhcm. And no w Ytdcr, for‘. ‘m... 2:,“ flxirchéd to l~"'.¢> combs‘ ls well as hair pins. ' Some 0i‘ the nicer ours have. rhinestones in the shape cf diminu- lzve stirs fastened right on trip of Ever-colored hair pns If yiu arc .,.. .Lrl.’i young zuzd ‘nave n nice youthful bun 1y sttiflcri up head. Again living fool- ish I went. about my work. now today as n result I am forced to shy lnckors. on your neck. why not» faslfln £1 Wllil!‘ row of the lzttle. slurs right into the bun? Larger stairs, moons and crcscents 12c nitachezl to combs that actual- ly grip the hair. One on cnch side eitlrr just in front. or just back of your cats. is good for formal even- ing wear. i And y0u‘d0n't have to stick t0 thinrsloncs. Tlhezc are lo\‘e'y green and red stone combinations which flatter ay head of hair. Pale pink stones made to look 11k“ rosebtids. are new too, And green four-leaf clover shapes will delight the heart of the 'girl'vvho""iikes'" a touch of - green in hcr hair. Ifyou can wear your hair behind your cars, by all mcnm; do lt — at least in the evening. If you have long hair. don't cut it. While bobb- ed hair usually is becoming, long hair is paced ahead of it this win- fer. 1‘n other words, buns and moods are fashionable. COLDS OFTEN BEGIN WITH SORE THROAT Many infections begin with sore throat-w. feeling of rawness, some- timss a definite prln on swallow- ing, either on on? side or both at the back of the throat. The soft palate and the little projfction in the centrc- the uvu- la-- air lnfinmed and look red and tangy. , If you fer-l well in yourself, this is of litllc lmportnnc‘: but if. in ndrliiioti lo the ptvn. you feel out of of sorta, it is a “he precaution to inkc your tcmpcrnttu-c. If you arc fcvcrsh. go to bod al our" and sz-iid for a. doctor, If therc are no sigrs of lcvrr nnl n: oflrr fvcll"); of ilint-‘s, n {triple purglc uill tun r.l'.y.' put. thfng< right, A salt and water gm- glc docs wry well. Gnrglc n tnblrsimonful at a time living nt ltast three tablespoon- Iuls. WhenYout-Cough Hangs On, Mix " This at Home Saves Good Money! No Cooking! ‘ l!" you wnnt the beatpough remedy I n0 money cnn buy, mix n: at home. t chats vcr llttln, yet it's the most re- nble, uic air-ting medicine you ever acd. ‘he wny it taken hold nf stub- rn"cou ha, giving immediate relief, zcbonfila ingi. ‘ b . uy rugg st can uuppy you wit fir; ounces of Pint-x. Pour this into a _ oz. bottle, and add granulated sugar lyrup to make 10 ouucca. To mukc pyrup, use 2 cups of sugar and one cu of water and stir a fcw momenta unt dimmed. No cooking needed. It's no trouble nt all and lycn ou four times m: mun. coug 1 med cine or your money s-a real family supply. hccps ner- Icctly and tnatcs flue. _ lt..ls surprising bow quickly tlnl ‘oestrus the germ-laden plllvlllu. flofltlwfl Ind heals the lnflnmcil membranes. tleursJhe nlr pnann en, and thus ends 1 snore cough in n urr . Plnvx h a compnun of Norway v inc. ln concentrated form. the moat - ellnble hv-nling ngrnl: for aevcre coughs. t is gunrnntend to give prompt relief that wen a (icctor, with all arts at his iuigcr tps, cannot avoid HOW TO MAKE YOUR ROOMS LOOK LARGER Do al‘ you can to make your house nn appeanancc of vast size. I-‘cor iustanc‘, if there is an un- necesary door bnween the dinig room and the living rocm, why not iDoroth y Dix ’s Letter Box Are Love Affairs Harmful in High School? -- Pity Husband Whose Wife Makes Him Slave for Her FamilyL-The Smaller the Woman, the Bossier Dear Miss Dix-The question of courtship between high-school stu- dents is a subject of much discussion in our school. What do you think have it lawn out? Small rooms should not be over- crowded wl:li furniture. If you nccd lots cf senting space for guests uemember that a studio couch or .a divan will swat several people and take up much ‘ess room than three or four large cha rs Small \‘..lld0\\'S shcud have their curtains pushed back toward the sidw to give an iiluslon of greater width and sho t window's look much longsir if the ovcrdrnps touch the ifl or inst-::v<l 01‘ cndng at the win- dow sill. (‘URE COLD—STAY AT HOME IN BED TO‘ The (lav bforc yesterday; wriics n dxior, I suddenly noticed after lunch au unplcn-fzint- sensation in my zhrtc-ab- it was not exactly 5'0"‘ it hnd a curious uplcnsant "sund- mpc y" 30c‘ about it and I knew at mire that. I was in for n cold. did in. ‘next best thing nnd tried to prawn: 1115's 1f developing n proper purpose I lllld :t painted immcd: rly, and tlzrn painted agulr. '21:‘ s‘me evening. At the same ' c I got. 5011b‘ throat lozen- ges 811G sucked ion" durzng the aftcrn or. and evening. Yrsierday‘ my throat was hilrr and a few more of tee 1oz nge< dining the d~v finrshed 1t off. But, alas, the oiher aide of my ilill(‘.\\' nw< 011')" just. slnrtng: I hncl u. ru! mi: XlOFC‘ and :1 tharough- and l um tolling you this to show you his of love affairs between high-school girls and boys? Don't you think that .- it is human nature for them to fall in love with each other, and that it is all right as long as we don't let it interfere with our work? IN DOVE. Answer: Love, my dear boy. is a dangerous game for even adults to play. It is no pastime for school boys and girls, and I can think of noth- ing more demoralizing to the morale of a. school than for It: student; to be indulging in courtships. To begin with, it takes their minds off their studies. Love-making is the most observing occupation on earth. For the time beinB 1i; 51118 WW8 mind to the exclusion of every other thing. The boy whose head is full of dates with some girl isn't impressing any dates of history on his mem- ory. The boy who is figuring on how he can outwit some rival isn't con- centrating on mathematics. The girl who is making sweet eyes at some boy isn't focusing her allcntion on her books. The girl who is making up her complexion half of the time in order to make herself attractive to some boy isn't making much progress along educational lines, ' No, sou, you can‘! -con1bille courtship and studying. The youth in love can say with the poet, "My only nooks were woman's looks and folly ls all they have taught rue." Inasmuch as your schooldays are brief, and what you learn in them is all-important to you as long as you live, ll; l: a. pity not to devote your time to the pursuit of learning instead of the pur- suit of n skirt. There will RiWBYS be plenty of women and plenty of time for courtship, so there is no real hurry Ln forcing the issue while you are still a schoolboy. Of course, it is natural for girls and boys at the high-school age to be attracted toward each other. In an unsophisticated and primitive state of society it is the age at which the young mate. But we do not live in. a primitive and unsophisticated state in which we can dwell in grass huts and eat roots and berries and clreu in a. few skins and beads. We live Ln a highly artificial and most expensive time and place when we have housesnncl good food and fine clothes and radios and cars to make us happy and contented. And these coat money and so make it impossible for boys and girls in their teens to carry out their natural inclinations to get married. There- fore, why play with fire when you have no hearth upon which to build one? ' tho only remedy which is really any good, namely, staying at home n bod. when your turn comes be more sens ble. “Qii (01 Q§ l _ -111}! i3 y -. . ...,,,._.. .1 DOESPPT DRUG,DOPEu1-DEADEN Soot/ms Away Pains and Aches ASCO givvs astounding results, because—~ 1oithoul harmful or habit-forming druga— ASCO has every modern scientific pain- aootlung and pain-removing ingredient in it. Absolulrly soft. Prescribed by physi- cinnslfreatea no craving, constipation or digcstive troubles. Ever tablet stamped ASCO. Red, white a ‘blue box. All rirulllists. -— Tune in on ASCO Program on C. F. C. Y. daily 7.15 to 7.30 P. M. THE COOK'S i CORNER Hot Chocolate Sauce 1'.» cups sugar '-_» cup water. ‘l cup rich milk or, water 4 squares unsweetened chocolate l». tcnspon vanilla Lot sugar and water boil in a saucepan for 5 minutes, Cool partly and gradually stir in the chocolate which has bccn melted over hot watt-r. Add the vanilla. Place in a double boiler or in a pan over hot wulcr until ready to serve, At the inst moment, udd the milk. Hard sauce 1-3 cup butler 1 cup powdered sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla Cream butter and stigar together, nnd add the vanilla. Chili and form into n mould. Servings, 6. Serve with steamed or baked puddings. Orange Sauce 3 egg whites i. cup fruit sugar ' Grated rind of 1 orange ll cup orange juice 3 tablespoons lemon Juice Beat egg whites until stiff. Add sugar gradually, beating all the tlnic. Add rind and fruit juice. Jelly Sauce 1 cup sugar 4 tablespoons water l cup currant jelly 2 tablespoons lemon juice Boil sugar and water together for 5 ntinutes, thcn add the lemn juice money refunded, and whipped jelly. Serve at once. Besides, when the primitive savage gets tired of his mate he can simply abandon her, and that's that. But when we aophlatlcnte marry and get tired of our mates, we can only get rid of them at the price of messy divorces." And you may be very sure that you will get deathly weary of your schoolgirl sweetheart, as she will ‘of you, for a boy's and girl's tastes are unformed and the ones who fired their fancy at 18 will bore them to tears by the time they are-El or 22. And there is always the greater danger in these schoclgirl-and-boy courtships that the poor. foolish young creatures will get married and so wreck their lives in their very beginning. v- - Therefore, son, if you will take my advice you will cut out the love- making in school. Devote your time to your studies. It will pay you better than philanderlng. When you go into business you will need nll that you can possibly have learned about history and literature and. mathematics, and you will never regret the time you put in studying them. But you will repent the hours you wasted gazing in some little flappei-‘s bluc eyes and writing her mush notes that you blush to recall. DOROTHY DIX. O O O Dear Miss Dix-What do you think of a. wife who has always put her famfiy before her husband, who has kept him from taking advantage of opportunities for advancement because she would have to leave the place where her people lived? She leaves him to get his own meals after work- lng hard all day if she thinks any of her family need her, and she spends nearly all of the money he makes on her family. He has lost all interest in his home and is seeking happiness elsewhere. Is he right? - JACK. can Answer: Because his wife does wrong ls no excuse for the man doing wrong, but you can hardly wonder that he seeks consolation outside his home when his wife gives him so little pleasure in it. There are a great many women whose ability to be good daughters and sisters seems to crowd out their ability to be good wives, They an so obsessed with family affection that they have no love left to give to their husbands. They offer themselves up as willing sacrifices to their own people und think it unreasonable that heir husbands protest at also becoming victims. I know a case of this kind in which the oldest daughter was a sort of family martyr. From her earliest years she had nursed a, neurotic mother, who was a spineless bundle of complaints and whines and had taken care of a. worthless, drunken father and half a dozen little sisters and brothers. Finally this woman married and without a. particle of compunction or one thought of the injustice she was doing her husband she enslaved him to her family. He was a hard-working man who made a large salary, but every ocnt of it, beyond a. bare living, went to support her people. He was never able to save anything, never able to get ahead, and he died at last n broken and diaappionted man, whose wife had literally worked him to death for her family. Of course, the remedy ls obvious. It is for the man to refuse to let his wiferob him for her people. She hud a right to ask some help from but she certainly has no right to make him support them. Wives can bc- come very tyrannical and, like other tyrants, have to be reglgted and foiled- ' non/bray mx. Dear Dorothy Dix-I have a little sawed-off wife. Every time I go to town she raises Cain and the wuy she talks to me is something awful. What can I do about it? o’ B_ D_ 0 n Answer: The smaller a woman is, the bossier, 0. B, n, They 8H‘- Illll 0f Pep and Elnzer and are terribly masterful. Many a big man before you has been afraid of a little podket-sized womln ma; he could have managed with one hand tlcd behind him in n fight. Bo if you can't get ahead of her, the best way to do l5 to mind 11;; and save yourself trouble. If you had wanted a woman you could boss, | you should have married o. great big American lady, DOROTHY DIX. Per him because if she were not married she would give them her enrnlngsjl- Campbell‘ v itlng her parents Mr. and Mrs. x ‘AAA Zlappenings of the Week An Edinbllmh lady. Miss J. Ron- alda. Macphall, who for some years has been an invalid, has cultivated pictorial needlework. Her work was described mm» time ago in an ar- ticle in The Weekly Scotsman, and indirectly through this notice a copy of the Queen's Christmas card, partly reproduced in needle- work and partly in paint, was, at Her Majesty's request. sent to Bal- moral Castle. Miss Macphall has received an acknowledgment from Her Majesty's Lady-ln-Waitmg, Ladv Cynthia Colville, who wrote that she was commanded by Her Majesty to thank Miss Macphall, and to say how pleased the Queen was with this attractive reproduc- tion of her Christmas card-a very clever blend of painting and needle- work, Inriy Colvllle also wrote u“; Her Majesty appreciated very much her kind wish to present the pig. ture to her, and was glad to accept this charming present. The Christ- mas card ia an attractive land- scape composition with a. pond and water lliics in the foreground, and rows of bright-coloured flowers leading to distant hills. It will be recalled with interest that the Queen very graciously honors the President of the Queen Mgfy Needlework Guild in this city, m- mmlly with hcr personal Christmas card. O O O Mrs. F. B, Conrad, Mrs. W. J, McDonald and Mrs. R. C. Chandler \vcrc popular chaperones at a de- lightful dance at the Canadian Na- tional Hotel last evening sponsor- ed by the Canadian Legion as a, social get-together preparatory to Armistice celebration today. a 0 p MT!- Hwy Brown, who is one of Charlottetowrfs most popular hos. teases. entertained at a. charmingly arranged bridge inst night at her apartment in the Queen Hotel. One of the dellzhtful social events of the week was the nine table bridge and tea given Thurs- day afternoon by Mrs. Murdock McKinnon at her home on Grafton Street. O O . Mrs. P. C. Turner was among the popular bridge hostesses entertain- ing moat enjoyably last Saturday afternoon. OOO Mrs. F. E. Colwill. who has made a wide circle of friends since tak- ing up her residence in Charlotte- town entertained yesterday after- noon at seven tables of bridge in honour of her friends at her home 133 Fitzroy Street. O O Mrs. Lloyd Wellner entertained at an evening Bridge on Wednes- day in honour of Mrs. Lyons of Moncton. 0 Mrs. Harry Winchester entertain- ed at two tables of Bridge Monday evening honoring her sister Mrs. Dawson of Vancouver who is vis- Nelson Rattenbury. OOO On Wednesday evening the Misses Helena and Irene Home had two tables of Bridge for Mrs. Dawson who is being most cordially wel- comed by her friends. O O O Mrs. Fred Houle was hostess at two social gatherings this week. entertaining on Thursday and. Fri- duy nt Supper Bridges. O O O Mrs. W. H. Pethick entertained on Tucsdny afternoon at her home on Euston Street inviting friends in for six tables of Bridge, others coming in at the tea hour. O O O Among the tea. hostesses at the Chateau Frontenac, Quebec City, this week was Mrs. E. P. Harring- ton who entertained in honour of her daughter, Miss Carmen. ma. Harrington is on route from n pleasant holiday in Western Ca-n- ada. having spent the pest six weeks with her daughters, Miss Maudie, Mrs, J. F. Berry, and Mrs. Colin Mrs. Ivan Home entertained at n prettily arranged miscellaneous honor of Miss Anne Currie McPhee’ whose marriage took place yester- day to Mr. Stewart Moore. Many lovely gifts were ‘tendered the popular young nurse. O O O Mr. Allan Moshei-‘s many friends will regret to know that he la ill in tho P. E. I. Hospital suflcring from' pleurisy which will confine him to his room for several weeks O O O Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Altken were guests of honor at a. delight- ful house party manger! by Mrs. Ivan Home on Wednesday even- ing at the commodious residence of Mrs. H. H, Home, Elm Avenue. which was ideal for the merry pro-, gramme of contests, games and] dances arranged by the Wohelo‘ Club of which Mrs. Aitken in n valued member. During the evening pretty farewel souvenirs were given Mr. and Mrs. Altken who are mot-~ oring south in the near future. a a a i Mrs. A. M. Silver who has been‘ spending the past few months re- newing pleasant friendships among her old home friends left Wednes- day on return to her home in Dor- chester, Mass. O Rev. Allister Murray of Caledonia followed by the good wishes of the members of his congregations is leaving early next week on an ex- tended holiday trip to Scotland, which it is hoped will prove most beneficial to him- Mrs. Murray will visit at the Manse in Howick Que- bec, during her husband's absence.‘ i c o a Miss Anne McPhee was the guest of honor on Wednesday afternoon at n. tea given by Mrs. James Mont- gomery at her pretty Ritz apart- ments. On this happy occasion Ivflss McPhee was presented by her P. E.‘ I. Hospital Classmates with a. wedding gift of flat silver. O O O Novel ash-trays are being provid- ed for this winter's tea-tables-no longer need the hostess dread hav- ing her dellcite china. scarred with burning cigarette ends. Individual ash-trays are to be had resembling real flowers. Each ash-tray consists of a single flower-head, just over life size and tinted in its own nat- ural colour. Narclssi, primroses, and tulips are among the blooms repre- sented. For bride tables, ash-trays can be had which "nest" into each other when not in use. O O O Bridge hostesses this wcek includ- ed Mrs. W. 1". Morris and NLrs. George T. Blnns. HONEYMOONEBS OFF TO WEST INDIES (Special to The Guardian) MONTREAL, Que., Nov. 10.-Per- haps lured by the inst chance for honeymoon rate reductions, several couples who will be newlyweds with- in the week sailing for Bermuda, the Bahamas and Jamaica. from Mon- treal next Wednesday by the Can- adian National Steamship "Lady Somers." "After all, marriage knows no season," declared a. local travel agent. The “Bomers" will be the last “Lady" liner to leave Montreal this year for the West Indies. Hon- eymoon reductions lapse after she sails. ‘Ihenceforth Halifax and Boston will be exclusively the ports of departure on the Canadian Na- tional Canada West Indies service. though the Canadian National Steamship "Prince David" will con- nect Miami with Nassau, a distance of 200 miles this winter and Saint John, N. B., will contipue to be the northern terminus for "Ladymliners from Trinidad, British Guiana and the Lesser Antilles. "GIRL FOOTBALL BQUADS THE NEWEST IDEA HAJRIIBIIORNE, Okla., Nov. 10- Thlrty three "sweet young things" have turned out on first call I01‘ tryouts on Hnrtshorneb girls foot- ball squad, one of the few in the Unitrd states southwest. Reford Stack is coach. But other towns in this mountain region like the idea and the pretty "Amazons" may form a. circuit be- fore it is over. stack says. ‘The first clash will come on November 10 ut McAlester, between Hartshorne and shower on Tuesday evening in l Tired, is sick and w dutics. coursged, _l Kiowa. giris. - Worn 0ul Woman 0|n’l lhko a llappy llom _ There is no happiness inlthc home when the mother orried b She s the never ending household eta run own and becomes nervous and gjlifziglphlzunghorétlneuiolihbrentb, fnint and dilly, -. e u ' ' u she "M “lbeddlullld izfiormngfeelmgutlxed ownheartod and dil- u Milburn’: H. d N. Pills will soon convince women “ ‘wt "even-w w wfler. u they buildup m 23°!" "m"! lid blink buck the former health shions -:- ‘tlnue the lnnu AMomingSmilc Mrs. Mandy Johnson - Ah wants to see wmn Remson. Office Boy-Mr. Romltm is en- gaged. Mrs. Mandy Jvhnlen — G9 1on1. boy. Ah doesn't want tn marry him. ‘rell him his wuhledy wants huh money. Bandy wu learning to play the bagpipes One night, while he wu strutting about the room. aim-ling for all be was worth. his wife at- tempted a mild Protest. “That's m awfu‘ noise ye're mak- ing." she said. sandy sat down and took ofl his boot-s, then got up and xuumed his piping in his stockmged feet. Reducing Canada's Buffalo Herd _--- .. OTTAWA, Nov. Ill-Buffalo meat‘ will new: grace u» tlblea of cui- adian homes, hotels and restaur- ants, following the decision of the Depnrtment of the Interior lo con- buffalo herd at Buffalo National Park, near Wainwright, Alberta. During November and December. 1938, 2,000 animals will be slaugh- tered and the dressed cal-cases and hides placed on the market. Th’: slaughter is made necessary by the limited grazing facilities of the park, and is intended only m off- set the annual increase registered by the herd, which at the present time numbers about 7,500. These annual ‘uctiona in the Buffalo Park herd ncall to mind the outstanding success experienced by the Government of Canada. in bringing buck from practical ex- tinction one of the moot muniti- oent ruminants in the world. Sixty years ago the buffalo inhabited the western plains of Canada. and the United States in countless thous- ands. The cdvanoe of civilization and the improvfdenoo of hunters, however, brought about one of the greatest slaughter: in wild life history, when more than a million buffalo were killed off in lees than twenty years, all but wiping out of existence this most interesting species. In I907 the Government of can- ada was presented with an oppor- tunity of acquiring a mil-ll herd of pun bred buffalo from a hslfbreed named. Pablo who had lost his graz- ing privilages on the Flathead Iin- dlan reservation in Montana. Dur- ing 1906, I909 and I010, a. total of 716 ofwheae animals were deliver- ed under contract by Pablo. Of this number, 631 were placed in Buf- falo National Park, and the re- mafnder in Elk Island Nntional Park near Labont, Alberta. An ad- ditional 117 animals were introduc- ed subsequently to Buffalo Part fem other sources. Since that time both herds have Nsistmd astnn. ishing gains. In Buffalo Park alone the original 748 mimals have in- creased by more than 23,000. Various mus ya have been tak- te ivovnmnn 11. 193s ' ratere SMALL 80TH! BIlllillIEllS MOTHER'S 001.0 Allll BllllSllES BABY'S OUUGII Hen is just mother ’ amongst thousands that goes to prove there is "nothing ilk: BUCKLEWS MIXTURE" for coughs, or colds. But we'll let. Mls. Baden, of Todmorden, tell the story herself. “Recently, I had such a cold I couldn't speak. I got a an-iall bottle of BUCK- LBWS MIXTURE and in acouplc of day: my cold had disappeared. My l8 months old baby coughed a great deal at night. I gave him a few drops of BUCKLEYS MIXTURE on sugar. It stopped his cough entirely and now he slog the night through." It is one great feature of Buckley's —you can give it to a baby with the same perfect safety as you can to a grown-up. If you have a cough. cold, ‘flu or bronchitis, get a bottle of this re- markable remedy today-ll acts like a flash-n single sip proves it. Rurkley": Mixture is sold everywhere. Refuse sub- stilutes. en in the past to reduce the herds. I several years. ago 6,673 buffalo were sh'rpped north by the Department of Wood Buffalo Park near Fort Smith, Northwest Territories, while some 8,500 head have been slaugh- tered and their m‘... and hides au- al "dllciivn 0f the‘ posed of A small outlet is also pr0~ vided by the loan or gift of buffah to zoological gardens of recognized standing. Strictly WP i0 date methods an used in preparing the anmals for the market. The entire herd s. rounded up and the animals select» ed are separated and herded inn special oorrals conveniently close to the abattoir. All operations are carried out in a. modern albattoh under the direct supervision of n ‘napector from the Health of Ani- mals branch, Department of Agri- culture. a-ud only first quality meal which passes inspection is sold t4 the fresh meat trade. As has been 211g practice for n. number "of year: n mall number of carcasses from this year's slaughter are being re- served by the Department of the mterior m- dehydration 911F908“. and will be used for relief of dis- tress among ltndlans and Iixlclmos Buffalo meat has all the juici tenderness and flavour of the fin- est Western beef. and la highly m- gnrded as n-n article of food. m pioneer days only the tongues and part of the carcass surrounding the hump were utLlined for food, but modem butchering methods have provided many choice outs from dlffcnnt sections, and the palalte may now be indulged with a variety of males, chops, and roasts. The hides of the buffalo after tanning lend themselves to the manufacture of many articles. North American buffalo rdbes and floor rugs we known the world ov- er, while in moenl; years unproved fur-dressing methods have produc- ed s pelt that makes up into beau- tiful coats for both men and wom- en. For warmth, durability and an; pearance, buffalo coats compare favorably with those made from other choice Canadnn furs. Ilnnrd’: Llnlment remove: ltnlnl. Smart women are ever on the search for this sort of suit because of its wearability. It's unrivaled in chic with its in- I divldual cont for town, commuting i or spectator sports. The dress is excoedingly youthful and becoming and would grace any afternoon bridge or tea. In the original black woolen was chosen and the trims. very pliable black satin crepe which made the Bil-h. UH? buttons, pleated frill and bow tie. Bright red, rust or greenish-brown are lovely shades for this model. You can make it at a very small outlay and it's as easy as A, B, C, to put it together. Style No. 044 is donned for sizes 14, 1B, l8, 20 yelm, 38 and 88 inches bust. See pattern envelope for material requlr . Price of PATrliR-N ll cents m lllmw or coin (coin in preferred.) wrap coin cuefnliy. No. .844. ........................... Nani .-..--.--...-...|.-nunun-nun. MKIIIIO Ill ‘III IVIIY Pl Daintinieu With cm Styles IOIIIIINUNI -.~-n.n...-nn-uu-nnocen-guq UK. street Addrul ..-uuuun-u-upnucn on; dD-lbIQfP.JIlII-r 33f’:ODYIIQZQZIDIBISQQQSEEIQQ‘ 5g§ig=syu§ ‘ :