.. c a M Children Visiting TOYLAND Yes. Sireel He wanls ‘lo see all his friends, young and old . . BIG TOYLAND al HOLMAN'S. arrives ai 2 p. m.-So, be on iimel Remember The Date - Tuesday, November 29th - 2 P. M. HOLMAN’S CHARLOTTETOWN Musi- Be g Accompanied f. By An Adull‘ I I l Fannie Hurst uvorid?" he queried. "Yes. and get the card. Miss Mullane. r these children." sked Mildred’: youngest. m away l" lg question." er voice that 'hine of peanut whistle. M NJHPJHHNS- ' l RDliB v ‘Ii you got a little girl?" tshacki it actually and mysterious- E Mildred Jerked the child by hcrllyr seemed to smell leather, old. By A "Could you squash~tha whom meat __ |.id Kitty dryly from the sideline. i-I mem_-. "Instead of muttering into your Y°“ mlimwmart women like you, aren't iur nncern yourself with sweetmeat; just having kids and fussing Emu“ "Does sweetmeat groin.‘ on cows?" "Gmdmsi are You the kmd °l imagine any of you doing house- rats who ask question that nidl-(CS ionkeys out of grownups? Take She's the darndest kid for aol<~ cried Mildred, in was not like toe then we are living outside 'l‘tit.~.a,. always used a retreat into privrvy. ght. the daughter of lvlildred anti l chairs and a pine ;able fastened he; whitish the Chnrlottenburg. eves furniture, re‘ics from upon I am" I bony arm. "Doris. stop being rude." l pipes and hot dust. i “The child isn't being rude," said l, lSlerra, smoothing her hair. a natural question" look." Baldwin was himself here, aftcr dvjsiilie manner of a man who_ hav- ‘ing no affiliation with the present, “Not here." is s among the nostalgic. relics that "why?" ‘(any him bltckward by way o.’ "My wife me8ll5-—\\'lly. she means .their sight and smell, It was the ~ mos: alive room in the house. It .sme‘led of man. old leather. horse, and hot. sun on prairie dirt. Exen the stuffed little prairie dog on the sill seemed not to be looking across the street into the windows of a dentist. rut across ssigebrush. It was all ofd S1109 oi a room, that contained Kitty as incon- ‘gruouslyi as s-uch a, room must. In iinct, uhen she burst in uivon h':n. glirusliinz post a maid who ha-i lComO up to announce her, Baldwin iroso from his chair hurriedly. as ',if to save hcr the impact of enter- ‘lilg it. “Bless my soul-Mary should- lirt have lot you up here in this out," "She means-women like you~_ and making a home for some min n "Yes, that's what I meant.Ic.u:'t iavork," John. on A small coal fire burned in an old-fashioned grate set into one. of thrxse white marble mausoleum mantelpieces in the small third- “Once floor room John Baldwin hind stricken ain't she ask the circwt rider whirl Except for the spot of fire. it placct" been awake ad a beard. if faces like his is'might have been a foreman's 0lll£t*_ here mattress filling grows." lin a mining camp. Bare of any‘ '5“? (llillll- Jilllfl- Sllc lTlPd l" Encouraged by the focused spot-ifurnishings except two pinewood 119i’ very bcst front-door manner (his ma; ‘to prevent it. In fort Mary positive- "Nonsense, 9 83,204+: a o . y. i T, Oh Boy. SANTA Arrives in Charlottetown TUESDAY Nov. 29H: 2 P.M . Come In And See Him In His TQYLAN At HOLMAN’S Your Old Pal Sania will arrive in Charlottetown on Tuesday, November 19th a+ 2 p. m. sharp, r. So bring Mollier, Dad, Sisfer and Broil-tar +0 SANTA'S Join in 'l’l16 fun! Sonia has a gill’ for all his liiile friends. There were small birds on Kitty's trifle oi a hat A small round muii and scarf of gray'squirrel, corresponded to the Maltese quill-l iv of her eyes, set her off of staring into darkness. just left mo. Has she sent you tn help keep the vigil?" THE GUARDIAN, CHARLOTTETOWN his firstlly forbade me to crack in uponiesn't like you alone and brooding. "Hawcfiice in a Butte. Montana, mininglyou in this rianncr, and so hcrcl but she doesn't even know I'm t here. I thought perhaps you migh that (IJYOl the dyes‘ tho rather, thumb until Novcdays: I i N past. through long periods ‘Sierra Naturally Sierra rio- poring over yours?" I-Ie regarded her with his bleak eyes and flipped the folded docu- ment away from him and third finger. read ugly." he said. "It's a kind of funeral on paper. Never read one I read my own. Nasty. A piece of life has died. and you re- ceive its death notice." She reached over; took up the sheet and shoved it beneath a mass of newspapers. "There" your dead buried." Drawing chair closer to the table, she pia/i- ed her gloved hand over his liver- splotched one. "I'm brooding over what's dead and burl- ed. John. I had hoped you would feel well rid of it." To be continued "Feeling, I hope. as young as you pay me the high compliment oi bPing glad to see me." ‘This is the decree." he lingering a document. "Would you like to see it? “No. I never look into the oasket _ at funerals or persue divorce de- dazzlingly, considering that her halal crecs. Surely you aren't sitting hcre of the same totisied cut that had, followed her typhoid fever years‘ before. no longer took well. It was tinted now startling mauve tones which oon l ceded the grays in it. In fact. Mul~ lane-blue hair was just beginning to rock the dowager world. "People no longer compliment mo. . what I Rm. they compliment nie for looking like what I am not." That was too much for him. You could tell that, when he raised me eyes in his gray face They were looking. as if they hail bald. with his "Th ey up i'.l.’I‘ sorry you're ll’s like the llLllllIllNllllIl business PLANTS -all kinds of plants-need supplies to thrive on. This is true of plants in the garden, and true of plants which make articles of aluminum. Vegetable plants draw their supplier from the soil and the air. The 1000 and more aluminum manufacturing plants across Canada draw theirs from us. And just as different garden plants pro- duce different leaves, flowers, roots and fruits, so these manufacturing plants shape our aluminum into a variety of use- nn-cfl’ \>‘Mlfl0‘ LOA z p ~' 0%; its _ TORONTO I __L‘ -___-n WINDSOR ful forms -kitchcn ware, garden tools, fur- niture, bodics for aeroplanes and trucks . . . all sorts of things which people want because they are light and economical. We and these independent manufac- turers make n team. They draw on us not only for aluminum but also for the tech- nical scrvices of our laboratories.‘ And because we produce, here in Canada, a quarter of the world's aluminum, they are able to buy this metal at lower prices than anyone else anywhere. 0 MONYRIAI. o llllMlllllM COMPANY OI CllllDl, lTDq Producers and Proeosror: o! Aluminum for C onodion Industry and World Marlzdl QUIIIC 0 VANCOUVII J ust Loold Changes In Winter PEI Train Schedules Changes in winter train sched- ules in Prince Edward Island effec- il\‘e Sunday, November 27, were announced here yesterday by L. J. IiiacDonald, division freight and district passenger agent, Canadian Nntinnnl Rallwnys, here, The ad- justments include a number of nd- dltlonal train services. In the Charlnttetown-Souria sor- vicc, two new trains will be oper- ated on Tuesday's, Thursdays and Saturdays leaving Charlottetown lit 7:30 n.m, nncl Sourls at 1:30 p.m. In addition. trains will run daily except, Stindny leaving Charlotte- town nt Zzliti p.m. and Souria at 7:30 n.m. The SourlsElmlra service will he doubled, Trains will leave Souris on Mondays and Fridays at 6:45 p.m. nnd on Tuesday; and Thurs- days at 5:45 p.m. nnti Elmira on NOVEMBER 18, 1,4, g Remember, he TOYLAND ' Come choose the gown of your dreams-be ready to whirl through the holidays in romance and exciting Tuesdays. Wednc-sdzrv, Fridays nntl Saturday's at 6:30 1mm. Instead of only two trains weekly in each dir- ection, with the new service thorc will he four each woy. A daily except. Silnday service will ho opt-rated from lVit. Stewart .lct. to Gcorgetoivn leaving Mi. Stewart Jet. nt 4:00 p.m. on Mon- days, Wednesdays and Fridays and n! 3:45 p.m. on Tuesdays, Thurs- davs and Saturdays. The operation of additional car fcrry service between Cape Tm- montino nnd Borden has nlsn been announced by Mr. ilizicDonald. In- stead of only one trip in each dir- cction on Sundays as last year. the ferry will be operated twice on Stuidays leaving Cape Tormcnllne n! i0..'i5 am. and 8.00 p.m. and Bordon at 0:10 n.m. rind 6.45 p.m. until Sunday, December v25, inclu- sire, Three, irlps will be made in each direction daily except Sun- llli)‘ from Cape Tormentine at. 10:35 n.m._ 2:40 p.m., and 7:30 p.m. and from Ilordcn at 9:10 n.m., 1:00 p.m and 4:30 p.m. until December 31. inclusive. Religion And Llfa (Continued from ii>age 3) is being crowned King over an nor-widening range of life. only once did I meet D. L. Moody. lL WES but for a moment, but for that moment I was the centre of his interest. "Young man. get that pout-er" was all he said. but that thought was the key-note of his marvellous ministry. He described how it came to him in an address in Glasgow during his first mission in Britain. He said that when he was leading a. religious work in Chicago, two godly women came to hbn and said, "we are praying for you that you may receive power." "Whyf I thought, "I do not need power: I have power. My church is the most largely attended in the city and everything connected with it is pros-poring." t these two went right on praying for me. Then one day in the city of Glasgow-oh! Vlhflli I day! I seldom refer to it. I cannot describe it. All I can say is that the Spirit of God came up- on me in such s fullness that I had to ask Him to stay his hand. I did not preach any new doctrines. but the old message of the Gospel had new effect. I would not be back where I was before that blessed experience if you were to give me the whole of Glasgow: it would be as the small dust of the balance. What did it all mean? First, that a new dynamic had coma into his soul. He was lifted into conscious union with God and found the Spirit of God working through Him to change man. In the ‘Int qulrwr of the ninotlcnth century the pow- er of tho Holy fifirit was the da- lire of ovary evangelical Christian. Moody madoflorthfieid a centre of study and conference, and it be- came a Mecca for thmnondl of students and a centre of muni- icai rind missionary activity. ‘rho baptism of power was the aim of | the most earnest of the land, and fashion. Select your dancing and dining frocks from our gala new holiday collection. You'll ovo iti Dinner and Evening Gowns $19.75 to $42.50 New shorter length Danoe Frocks of taffeta, nylon and net $18.95 to $89.50 See this interesting collection to appreciate their red beauty and class. USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN A deposit will hold any garment. The GREENIJAL o. Ltd. EXCLUSIVE moms waaa 99 Queen Street great numbers received it to their grow in answer to the light. I0 u" own unbounded satisfaction and divine life starts into acunty in io the spiritual renewal of the every heart that is 0P9“ i° m‘ multitudes whom they served. truth of God. Christ becomes ti" The ideal of Christian service is this: While the Gospel is being preached, the Holy Spirit is at work in the hearts of the hearers quickening them into eternal life. A personal worker once testi led, "I have never spoken to anyone about Christ without finding that the Holy Spirit had been there before me." "God is light" wrote st. John, supreme Reality to the one iihil! touched by Him. Every 8°00 mm‘ in him is reinforced and hrouizhtlfl the throne in the soul. lle L1 en- abled to overcome the crll in and around him—or rat-her. 011"" 9°" quers in him, Then He uses hhiifl reproduce His character in others- LONG TRIBITAR!’ and as the light shines through] The liuallaga, n il\i‘l of Peril every ohink in the walla, so the rises in the Antics iill0“ll°:e| till Til (‘I Spirit of God enters every soul open l "OrmWm-d rm- some T‘ to Him. As the seeds sprout and linro It joins tho Aimzcn. A. PICKARD my a mlligs uflh children choosi ‘blue coal’ burns with a slow Contlnuo s flame-Ind! d" jumpy, up-and-down hear d!" so often causes colds. T17 'bl‘_" coal’ and feel the diflerenrl l3 health and comfort. Phone Ill‘ today for this naver-fliliflfl m!‘ TIILPIIONI ll. firm Lillili’ a cQfl