PAGE TWP Woma n’s , For The Cook DATE BARS 8 e288 1 cupful sugar 1 pound dates 1 cupful chopped nuts 1 1-3 eupluls flour l4 tesspoonful salt 1/.- teaspoonful baking powder. Add one-half the sug-zr to the beaten whites and one-half to the together and add the dates and nuts. Sift t0- gether the flour, salt and baking powder and add to the egg mixture. Bake in a shallow pan in a. moder- ate oven (350 to 375 degrees) from beaten yolks. Mix Q0 to 25 mlntites. Etiquette ‘ ‘ at-hpmc cards and is not expected to call n 1' l. l until others have called upon her. Q. l.~: llit- pucn or the fork Q. Is thc bildt‘ entitled to first imcd t " 1 .0165 such L's cutt- ralls after the return from thehuuu, rri honeymoon? ins, anJ ,]'.'lll;.‘s.’ | A. The spoon. Pii:'i~n*s |ci. iiir*; DIDN'T KNOW WHY So she went from had to worse. But Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills (tonic) brought her hack to health. ‘l FEW years ago, _-A before I was mar- ried," wrius Mrs. Fred McClelland, Dcsbnrats, Ontario, “I was ailing for 0_vcr a year. I rcally didn't know what was wrong with mo, because parents, at Lhat time, llwllllht young people should nevcr bcsick. I had no blood, and was so pale! If I went upstairs I would have to sit down when I reached the top. Finally a friend advised me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills . . . I took them, and had thc color come ,___ *_ ____M____ NOTICE On and after January 4th our business will be Strictly cash basis. I‘. J. X01 dc C0. Iluntcr River. i 1llllU~l'.‘-.,».~ii.. Don't judge a man by his nose; ' perhaps lt ls only sunburneci. The trouble with Eve W35 she vczisirt honest; she stole apples. C. M. Lampson 8C0. p LIMI Phi). M (Queen Street London. ti. C. l England Public Auction Sales l‘ OI’ RAW FURS lhlppin: bugs will be furriish~ ed without charge by flpflhlllfl i‘ to It. l. llolmun LlcL, Sum- mrrszde. l’ If. l. ' Represented by Alfred Fr user, Inc. ti‘: Fifth Menu: New York, N. l. irrolessicrtal Cams S’I‘i~.‘\VAlf'l‘ & l.()\\"l'lll£if J. I). STEWART. K. C. N W Ltivvllllfll Balltlllfllrilth Slll.I('!'l'()IfR. ETC 8-1 (lrrrrt (irmee Street MONEY If) LOAN iii McLEOl) 8r IHCNTLEY I A. BENTLEY W. .. BENTLEY K. C. Barrister and Attnrru-y-nt-Luw OlIlce: llitl Richmond Street llltlNhY TO LOAN —~- iElcDONALI) & McPHEE B. A. J. A. Mr-IIONALI) n. F. McPIIEE Barristers Attorneys. Etc. MONEY T0 LOAN Riley Building nss-szo-rmo-dau; BELL & lllATlllESflN I» ll. Bell. l). L. Mnfhlesnn, Ll. ll Barrister s. Solicitors Money to boon Charlottetown and Montana ‘ MARK n. McGUIGAN aunts-nut. sncicrron. no money 'ro com (lumorou Block. Charlottetown. Ell. "l looked myself again." (Sgrl) Mrs. Fred Mc-Clelland. bark to my checks, and I looked myself flllllll." There is a scientific cx- planation for lllt‘ n-nirirk- able results brought about by Dr. Williams’ Pink PilL (tonic). other elements in the pills mrrvzisc the amount of haemoglobin or oxygen- conducted on a. l l fries: I-Ivni-rimcntnl Station, Ilnllfax, l '~ iiho course the sum . irlollars plus the amount of railway rarrying agent in the blood. This has been provcn by official hospi- tal tests. 'I‘he incrinscd oxygen rr-Jvitalizcs the tissues just m :1 rinift of air kindlcs a. fin‘. The result is renewed health-Jicltcrappcuranto ~grcatcr happiness. Go to a drug store today and get a supply of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. I)iin’t put oil this wise derision. fir‘ sure to say “Dr. Williams“ so that the rlruguist will kriovi (‘kilflly what you want S0 cents a. packacc. r The iron and N-ot Appendicitis— I Gas Pains Fool Him "I had such pain in my right; side I thought 1 had appendicitis. But lt WllS only gas. After taking Adlerlka lI‘vc had no trouble."—w. L. Adams. ' You can't get rid of gas doctorlng .the stomach. For gas stays in the IUPPER bowel. Adlerlka reaches YBOTH upper and lower bowel, wash- ing out poisons which cause gas, lncrvousncs, bad sleep. Get Adlerlka. today: by tomorrow you feel the wonderful cffcct of this German iwctors remedy. Hughes Drug C0., , I td. l To rattle anybodys family skele- l ton ls a pretty shaky business. "Girl Typist. Beats 99 Men.” Won iin o. hundred. - l (1 OURSE l ‘, FSR FISHERMEN , __ The Illnlniical Ilnard of Canada. , ‘offers to as-Ixt a limited number of I ‘ fishermen from the Maritime Prov- ' iucos to ultrnii the Short Course for i FlQPPTfIIRII to he given a‘. the Fish- , N. S" during a term of r-iv weeks lr-onimcurjiu: nn January 27th, 1932. l Each will be given on completion of of Forty-five i fare fo- u. return trip between lfali- l .l;i-; an-l "l" rziihvav shllon nearest . hie lam-av. Iii ' limm fldc fishermen . from l7 to .".'. vcars of ave, who have a-wcl ll“"'l".',ll vrraile '3 in the public ‘lltlvla of tin- Maritime Provinces or "n (‘lllll\'i‘|"I'lf flfflfl“ ‘will l-r- ahln tn I ltl"! thew- grzmls. All applications trust ‘:- in liv .. nuary 15th and . whnul-l h." rllrlrorzzcd ta Fighgripg l("'l"‘l Flzilion, Ilalifak. N. J 9i. ..in. 4 . SALE By Public Tender i W» is? FOR Bay, Kings County, P. E, l, slyly. one acres under cultivation, balance , sci-om] growth. i lluildlmzs consist of: - lfouse I 2lx712, barn 2i. 5. granary 20x22, machine slim ‘<15. Watered by “ell. Nearest railpoint Bear River 21A miles-school Rollo Bay. Terms of sol-p are 10% of the pm. chase. price. in. cash,. lnlmurn amount to be $100.00, the balance ln , 5 to 25 equal annual instalment/s ue- ‘ cording to the amount remaining on l loan, with interest st 6% p" m. num. Each tender must bs accom- rmnlvd by on accented cheque for $100.00. Tenders wlll lm opened at l the ofllcc of the Soldier Tettlernent I of Canada ta January 18th, 1932. 1 Tfihdem “ " bo marked on rn- vclope ‘Tenders for the purchase of A. A. Paquet Farm and addressed to the Soldier Scttlmncnt. of Canada, P.0 . Bo! 1418, Saint. John, N. B. Jan. 4~2l. Prohibition Commission ‘ can. n. Block, Chairman, Chur- Iottctown. a In. B. McDonald, West St. Peters. John Simpson. lhmllton. v Send. sll Information regarding bro-sum of PBOBIBITION scr “about or a u. s. Fwwoql, ‘fififib g cuss rrsrro 1 AND GLASSES FITTED E. W. TAYLOR. J. S. IAYLOIC Optometrists 142 Richmond Street Realm CHILDREIE ' age into him. ltraordlnary way. A chaos of ing the words to himself mghtv4wo and a ha" Mm mun dosed the door and Sh“; gut the to prison for robbery with violence; sight of her. 1 O THE CrIARLOTTETOWIfI GUARDIAN Wurnlng l . 7 gay,“ .22.. i, Dvrvl/u 9w, .”;:::“.':::.. The men who are driven to such despair that they end their mis- ery by sending a bullet crashing through their brains or leap from twen- ty-story windows or jump overboard at sea are not those who 8o home from their agonized efforts to keep a business solos or to find employ- ment to wives who meet them with loving understanding of all they have been through and who say: Now is the Time for Wives to Show the Stuff of Which They Are Made, for Whether They Are to Hold Their Husband’s Love and Respect Depends Eu- tirely on How Sporting They Are During These Hard Times Listen wives. These be the times that try women's souls and tempers and show the stuff of which they are made. Most of you are walking through the Y Slough of Desponcl, and unless you watch your step you are going to lose in it something that ls a. 10b more valuable to you and more necvssary to your happiness than your stocks and bonus. You are going to lose your husbands love and respect, and when that 1s gone it is gone forever. You can't recover it, as you can your fortune. Of course, there urc plenty of vmtncn vxho arc meeting the situation with a high cotirugc and who hide their fears and anxieties in their own hearts and turn a smiling face upon their husbands. They make a Joke of having to do without the things they have been accustomed to and spice and plain- est meal withl aughter and good C111; er. Tlicy are 11w B000 SDOYi-i W110 stand by their men in hard times as they have stood by them in FY05" l perlty, and who fight shoulder to shoulder with them to the last ditch. , Never a. whimper out of them or a complaint. They are true-blurr- Bul; there are plenty of other wives who have not been able to stand . the gaff and who in the test that th is depression has subjected them to _ have shown themselves cowards and quittcrh. Yellow t-hrmlilll and 1 through. They have howled to high heaven because they could not have the pretty clothes and jewels and good things and fine cars that their husbands have lavished upon them for years. They have whined and complained over every hardship they had ta endure. They have wept and lamented over their misfortunes. worse still, they have ceaselessly reprouched their husbands with huvulg lost their money, or their jobs, o1‘ for not being able to get work. These wives take the last particle of hope and spirit out of a man, who is already at the breaking point. and send him to a. suicides grave, or else they kill his belief in himself so completely that he never has the nerve tc make another struggle against adverse fate. I doubt if any man ever really gives up as long as he knows his wife has faith in him and as long as she is cheering hun on and pouring her own optimism and cour- - John Gresham’s Girl-p l " By Concordia Merrel life again. Reality seemed to have ‘slipped from her grasp, and she felt that she was struggling in the throes of a. nightmare. And yet she knew that the nlghtmae was only the truth. I‘. had happened. that ghastly scene just now, with Jim. He had {old her all those terrible things. She knew that they were true, and she knew that they had changed everything for her. Yes- terday seemed centuries past. Her love her engagement, her wedding —all seemed as if they had hill)‘ pened to someone else. She rose ‘presently and crossed to the win- dow. It was wide open, and she sot (Continued) "If you are not afraid to be in the house with a man who has been convicted of robberly wltn violence perhaps you'd rather leave i‘. till tomorrow?" The bit- terness of that was indescribable. ‘lOh, I'm not in the least ufralclj’, she answered. "I just said now that I wasn't afraid of you. I'm not, and never could be. I wasn't afraid of your love and I'm not afraid of your hate." “Then you'd better go t9 bed. ‘There's nothing profitable in this." He turned violently and flung hlm- self towards the door of his dress- . clown, resting her elbow On the sill. mg room. _ “Is m“ your room. Jimsi- hm. her chn cupped in her palm. 'I'he voice came “m, mm_ igardcn was shadowy and sweet He tamed m the doorway with the night; a young moon, al- “Yw Bu, I.“ 8D and 5199p h, ready waning, flung the merest one of the spare rooms u- you 0b_ oowdering of silver upon the tree Jed to my being so mm. you,» 12,9 tops and across the open stretch answered bluntly‘ of lawn. Above was a sky, clear as enamel, unfathomable as thought. "Oh. n0." she 581d ilredly- "111 , . Everything vras very still and doesn't mRll-Br- Q9011 111s"?- J1m~" lovely. How could such beauty be, T116 11318 fOYmBHW» 601111113 Vim‘ she thought, when life had sud- such lifeless mechanicalness cluich- dmiy become so hideous to he" ed at his heart in the most cx- _ And yet it brought n degree 1m" of peace. She felt, after a while, P111595 BTQSQ “T511111 111m- and dled better for looking out upon it. The before 116 wild 20$ 1119'" 5°Tl°d 011? numbness seemed to lift a little But that last sight he had of her, and mwdghts began to struggk ‘Stlllldlllg there looking after hlm. Lhm. way through her mind, 59M. ‘suddenly brought something had said to his memory: “ ‘Rather a little girl. . . . And he found that he was sav- as he Sh" iered, chaotic, at first but grad- , uolly lining up into some sorl; of ‘sequence. 1 1 Jim was that mun who had gone a. workman at Greshomk. She had heard of the affair ln much detail. Lucy sat on the edge of the big mon; Amos, too but she had never bod staring out helplessly before heard of the affair in must detail. ooooo lhcr, trying vainly to get s. hold on She knew very little now. During‘ MR. AND MRS. I “Now, don't you think about it any more until tomorrow. Don't worry. wrist does it all amount to. anvw-v? We started with rwthlns and we were just as happy as we were when wo were rich, and we con do lt all over again. You've got the ability to succeed in you, as you have proved, and you can make a bigger and quicker success when this flurry ls over, because you have all your years of training and know- ledge to help you. And, anyway, we have each other, and that's all that. counts.’ A man with that kind of wife never feels that everything ls lost. He hos somcthing to live for and fight for even lf his money is all gone. He doesn't kill himself. He makes a new fight and ninety-nine times out of a ‘hundred he comes back. Of course, ‘lie hard times are as hard on women as they are on men. Perhaps they are harder, because women not only have to endure all of the hardships and the fear of want f or themselves and their children that their husbands are undergoing but they have, in addition, to put up with the irritability of men whose nerves are fretted ta fiddle-strings and who are plunged fathoms deep in morbid gloom. woman, but my appeal to wives ls to try to understand what it means to lo man to see the business which he has spent his life building up, into which 112W‘- gone all of his hopes and dreams and ambitions, toppling for a fall. To try to realize how it hurts an employer to have to cut down his force and turn those who have served him faithfully out to hnl! starve. To try to realize the black despair that fills a competent, energetic man who walks the streets looking for the 10b he cannot find. To think of the hurt ulde of the mun who has always provided well for his family and who suddenly, and through no fault of his own, finds himself un- able to give ‘hem more than bread. What if such a. man is unreasonable and ores and cantankerous and hard to live with! What if he is as depressing as a wet blanket over the family clrclel Surely a. wife should have enough lntultlon to understand that all the furles are tearing at the man's soul and that his tempers are Just his crying out ln agony. Surely, if there ever was a time for wives to be patient and forgiving and tender and loving. it is now. Surely, if there ever was a time for wives to nail on their faces a smile that won't come off, 1t ls now. Sure- ly, if there ever was u time for wives to buck their husbands up with their faith andkce p them cheered with their optimism. it is now. And l! wives will stand by and fight the good fight with their hus- bonds, they will win out, for this depression will soon pass and then hus- bands will remember how their wives played the game. And woe to those I who reneged. DOROTHY DIX. that nightmare scene with Jlm nggln; djnnhigly; unbearably, She ill-St now, Only. two facts had em‘ raised her hands to her head, press- ergcd: that mot man was the man ‘ng he; throbbing temples, she had married, and that he had 0h, for 50mg magic wand, that married her because he hated her. with one 5011011 could give he;- one what was she to do, then? lblest oblivion of sleep and let her Go buck to nei- father, as Jlmlwake “m” “l” "m" ‘m’ ghastly’ ' orro . t had suggested She could be sure 33:52:“: no rmag? wagonelut B; of syrups-thy and comfort there. y o ‘hese things. The golden age of - . Yes, she supposed that was the _ only thing to da Go back and ten fairy was gone, gone with that girl the truth. Tell that l; was for this she had been’ taking Wm‘ “l an man who could deal so treacherous- ' leaving ‘my this bleak ly with her, that she had given up ' her rose-strewn girlhood; for a It was nearly dawn when she man who could wound her ln this wearlly undressed and got into ‘crrlble, this monster-thing that bed; and fully clay before. exhaust- oliverls devoted love. . . . For a ed with a. sort of utter exhaustion man who had suddenly become this she had never before known, she terrible, this monoster-thlng that sank lnto sleep. Jim had shown himself to be. She mm trusted him so; loved him‘ so: glven him all her heart. She beat her hands together in a sort of dumb despair. It was n1 unbeliev- able, and yet she must believe; she did believe. Jim was that. ghastly“ treacherous. cruel thing; s. thing to be shuddered at; scarcely human ‘n his blazing. insatiable revenge- fulness. From being everything she loved, he had become-this, She did not see Lee again until noon next day. She had not been up long, but evidently he had, for he came into the house ln riding kit, hot ancbdusty; looking a; lf he had been riding fast and far. M he crossed the hall. he turned, and through the open doorway 0f the living room he saw her standing by a table, arranging pink roses ln a. big silver bowl. He stopped, start- . led b)’ her strange olr of compos- Whot did she feel for him now'!|ure. She had been pale and daz- An answering hatred? An answer- ed last night. she was pale, still, 'ng vengefulness? She searched her but there was a look of determin- heart for tihe truth. It was nonc of ation in her eyes; a queer firmness these. she did not know quite what about, he, lips; the little hands a- lt was. Just a. sort of numbed hor- mong tlm roses were steady and ror was as near as Sh-a could get purpcggful, she raised her eyes as to it. Fear? No. And yet he was she heard him, and for a moment there in the next room, with only the look between them held. He an unlocked door between them. wanted to go on upstairs to his He was hugely strong: she small, room. but something about her defcneeless. But there was no fear kept him. He knew, too, that noth- ot him in he;- heart. She had told mg was finished last night. an that 111m that Mid it hfld Mt bBf-‘n 111 there was almost everything still any way a bluff. Just horror, that to have om, with her. He come ln- was all. Horror of finding that to the room. closed the door, lean- somethlng she had loved and rever-jed back against it and said chal- cnced was really a thing to be hat-lienglnzly: ed. despised, abhor-red. "Well?" a Thoughts began then to go round She lowered her eyes to the roses in circles; repeating over and ovcringaln, selected two and put them t’s NeverAKnown p To Fail Heaven knows marriage under such conditions 1s no picnic for any - JANUARY 4. 193_z_ .-a_p- l ‘rat the Fashionables are Wearing -:- Social and Personal -:- Fashions -':- Literature llustratetl Uressmalung Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annabelle Worthington l l l l l The softened melting is a darling vogue. And isn't the partial belt effect smart the way lt ties so youthfully in how at the back? The ‘circular cut trouser legs are mod- erately full us l them. motifs on pale cldedly Wench dainty ln effect, as the original. It can also be carried out in crep satin, rayin novelties and fiat wash able crepe silk For lounging, vet and plain o Style No. 816 l2, l4, 1G, l8, lllCllOS bust. he younger set wears A crepe dc chine print with pin) i blue ground ls de- und exceeding? for bedtime. you may choose vol r novelty wool crepe is designed for slza 20 years, 36 and 3B Size l6 requires 3y yards of 39-inch material with 41.3 yards of binding. Be sure to fill in the size of lhs stamps or coin (0011 pattern. Send preferred.) Price of rmttern 15 cents, No. 816. Size ...................... Name "u"... "us" Street Address . . . . . .n.-._-uu-u~nn--uuuv Cllv State A Mo rningSmile Ytugg mun sto daughter o. family)! "And r 0.‘... imitate any kind of a bird." Irate Parent, (glancing at clock): "Can you do a homing pigeon?"- Christlan Science Monitor. into the bowl before saying: “Yes, I suppose there are thinls to talk over. . ., We haven't 0111*’? said it all, have we?" Her voice. we said any of She looked up at him unin- “Yes; you have wld me why you . . I'm glad that married me . it. yef’; too, was strangely steady and con- "on have told me that. Jim." ‘rolled. It was not the voice of the girl he had married yesterday, but broken. She was not the 811'] had married yesterday-the happy, radiant-eyed bride who had her fond little hand into his-but its wonders 101' M; 1am; she “'35 not the stunned brought some sort of peace and dc "Why?" “Because l have not still to lies: he was thankful to hear that the t." she answered 8W9¢111Y—-“I l" dead level of lost night had been 11nd that much 0f lt ll? W". 51'"! he “unnotyhuppen again." though than put ‘iadbeen no mazlc wand to ' work her, sleep had Evldnetly. e V811 hurt thing she had been last night. e"mlnat'on with it. “Said it; all!" he echoed. "Have BACKACHE is Nature's warning that there is something wrong with your Kidneys. Never neglect it. you fail to heed this sign that your Kidneys are out of order you are taking great. chances. Bacltache, if not corrected, is often followed by some more serious form of Kidney Trouble. Dolot hesitate until KidncyDisease or some of the maladies that follow in the train, get hold of you; but at the first sign of Kidney Trouble, such as Backache, turn unhesitaiinbl, to Dodd’: Kidney Pills. Kup your Blood in a Healthy Condition _- ' —lllraugh Hm Regular un of Dodd’) Kidney Pills Doddk Kidney Pills are a perfectly safe Remedy. They contain no harm- ful drugs and can be taken with pu- fect safety» by old and young alike. In Dodd‘: Kidney Pills is to bl found a Remedy to restore the Kid- neys to their usual condition and to tone up and rrengrhen these organs, them against future so as to fortify similar failures. Regain that sprightly step of health through the use of Dodd's Kidne ' Pills. For half a century Dodd’: Ki relieved other Cano- ney Pills have dian men and Bockachc and other ailments arisingfrom faulty B (To Be Continued) —- .... ...__—1~-.:-i is your IN G -—-D0n.’t Nwlect t/zis women from BRIGGS Wlwrs "u: mrrea? Dotti‘ You Feel. uleu ‘lfus mounts? Fm , NoT VERY. V . WE 601' A PAIN IN MY BALK QFAC AND M‘! LEFT KNEE Se!!!‘ llES,T>o A FEW ACRES AND PNNS MY AGE WELL, Ar YOUR Ase You Musr Exrecr , WHAT t) You MEAN — NOTmNG LIKE "lTlAT Vault-Ac! sToFF To won: A QUlcK cum-r l