w‘ v-J-neriqn-ev- ‘Qnln ‘s’ o. -. $5." 5 £5. w, g, E 6t . p " "(says the London Daily PAGF T\‘."\ I dunes» ooiooo-fioooqop wave-e o0 q w’... .Wbm7an"s Realm -:- 500i ZDQOAO OOOOO-OOOi-OO-OQOQQO-OOOOAO-Od X494 o ooo 0o oaooooyo‘ ooggqggpqq i OQOQOC§QOQOOOIQO fi-lO“v‘v THE CHARLOTTEIQWN GUARDIAN l’ OQOQvv‘ alv PeAijsonalimn-r-A ‘The HOUSEWIFE an r HER, A cinvm" s ma» run roam! or rfanru ____."_ , poctry ofcarth is nover- flea ‘fl-Keats , Theie is always room for bcuuty memory enclOse. still must be Room for another rose. Though skylark. throat, whip-poor-will, And nightingale earth's ing chantries throng, When comes another there will be loom for another, song, ‘Florence Earle Coated, Ililaflifi-ur» MEFYIIIISIItvrQv- vw - _ farms ,_ i; Dare to be true. Nothing can need i. a lie.‘ E A fault, which needs it most. grows two thereby. FRIEND Do not expectflicnds to do for ~ you what you can do for yoursclf.— Enniuh. QUALITIES Who can give qualities to men, when they have not brought the germ with them into the world?- G. Forster. __" BEAUTY "rffieauty can give an edge to the sword-Sir I’. Sidney. 1' SINIGING_ AT ~_wo_rm cod would have His servants ijfrjom angels downwards. sing at “their work.--E. Rundle Charles. Windsor Castle gardens Ybeen transformed since the Court ‘left in April. All spring bedding has TIBut, whatsoeer hath bccn, there throstle, white- ccho- 1 o.’ 1 I}. houses whcro the door is still opened t0 visitors by a llvciicd seiu _\‘P-X1t.' and the lll'(‘l'.0l', with its cool. clean’ m: blc setting and long, i115 ' . has a modified crping with retired A myriad lovely blossoms may i Princess Augusta is 18. and the , world still seems very good w her, She has inherited fzom her Ameri- can mother a keen sense of humour, and nothing in her new London home pleases her more than thc somewhat ironic mural which adorns the huge expanse of wall over the grand staircase Slflgfil‘, i cocoon IN THE HOME Colour is more and more making unprecedented nroads upon the department of household linen, an “all whilc scheme ‘l decoration threatening to become a Ii thing of the past. Here, as else- l where, the healing properties gf I colour are exercising a bencfjcent influence. The Chinese are, of course, adopts in thc skilful blending of colours. Recently I had the plea- sure of seeing some of their work ion fine British grass linen, tray- cloths, duchessc sets, and hand-i kcrchicfs being charmingly 1 (iccorated with littlc appliqued or embroidered flowers with quite an amazing niinutencss of detail.| | Nasturtium struck an attractive‘ 1 note when appliqucd on a cloth of‘ -blue. Strange mysterious Chinese. ' flowers sprouted forth with a whimsical look on their faces, all i pink and red. mauve and purple, yellow and orange, on the self- same tray-cloth. Pansy faces looked forth alluringly from white lincn groundi, whilc "symp- honies in (range and lemon" was not too "high falut-in" language in which to describe the appeal of other. Duchesse sets had “gone gay" in a bewildering colour- havc, chorus of flower petals of pink and ‘ ycllmv. blue and purple. i Thc handkerchicfs. with their . sraplmiIt is one of the few Lfintifll l Dorothy Dix 3 Letter Box IS N'T THAT A AMorningSmile DISH TO SET She Has Patience t0 Wait for it - Can Generous Woman Make Over Stingy ! Sweetheart? Dear Miss Div-More than a dozen life with a man who had small children. 1Reward 0f Good Stepmother May be Great if iiiwiilfilsii§iigadiiiiiiiitileiiiiiitgf $35.1 _ year I i l position to invest two college degrees and tlieagvinggvgf u: It}; ziecaerfielgg‘ ‘ I know what it means to put up with old furniture and to wear old clot-has because the money had to be spent for small the left. But monsleur insisted that! the servant should hang the picture f flwvfdlnk to his orders. Consequent- i’ ly Joseph stuck a nail in the wall on the right. but this done, he also went . and stuck another in on the left. ' "What is the second nail for?" his master inquired in astonishment. _ “It's to save me the troublg o1 latching the ladder tomorrow wbeni inonsleur will have come round to’ 0V8!’ Ihfim . . . SWCCICD l0 IBSIC TIIE boys‘ shoes, countless quarts of milk, doctors’ ; the views of madame." , bills, etc. I know what it means I means to be driven nearly frantic noises and thoughtless mischief, i . - ~ _ ' ;hrough the horrible “teen" i ' know nothing, - But we all tried to play the gamc, and by childish now when they call me the best mother in the i world and when I see them grown into fine men and women I am rewarded for all the hard work and sacrifice and hcartaches. There can be such a joy in the stepmothers lot if one is only willing to be patient and to pay. the W“, A STEPMOTIII-JR. I commend this fine, wise, brave letter to the many women who have of table mni-ricd iiicu with children and whose souls are fainting under thc misery I and hardships they have brought upon themselves. For the lot oi the stepmother is one that is full of trials and tribula- tions. There is no denying that. The lot of every mother is a hard one, for that mutter. In thc very nature of things it is one long sacrifice. It calls for lIlIIIOSL superhuman patience and forbearance and endurance. For children all have the same faults. They are all dirty. 11101181111955. B115- 1 chicvous, forgetful, selfish and unreasonable, and every woman who has to deal with them is due for a stretch of martyrdom. All this is harder on the stepmother than it is on the real mother because she must put up with everything that the real mother must put up with, without the mystic mother love that makes sacrifice sweet, that makes 1\ woman blind to children's faults and deaf to their noises, The stcimiothci- has nothing to take the curse ofl the irritations of children. nothing to turn them from brats into angels. Not only has she no moi-her love to inspire hcr. She is often bitterly jealous of her sbelwhhdfen 811d- resentful of the affection their father bestows upon them. I get thousands of letters from disgruntled stepmothers who bewail their unhappy fates and declare they are of all women the most miserable- Thcy complain of the children's lack of appreciation and ingratltude, of ' the work they have to do for them, of even their husbands taking it for ‘i granted that they must deny themselves luxuries to educate the children. that they must wear their last year's evening gown that the 81115 may ' have new party frocks, and they beat upon their breasts and cry out that a woman is a fool who marries a man with children. And tho trouble with them is that they are not like the stepmother ,who wrote this letter, willing to pay the prioe of stcPHIOLhBFhOOd- . T1181! are not willing m make the sacrifices for their stellchildl?" @1131» they lwould gladly make for their own. They ‘are not willing to do the labor i for their stepchildren that they would rejoice in doing for their own, They i are not willing to give their stepchildren the same forbearance they would show their own or make the excuses for them that they would make f0!‘ their own. _ If they did, they would reap a great reward. For, somehow, ciuldren do grow up, they do get civilized, they do pass through the awful hobble- __ been replaced with pink geramums, tiny flmver-decorations so perfectly , dehoy stage, they do turn into men and women. " and palo blue delphiniums- th -Queen's favourite colours. There ' are more than 10,000 plants in the ' ‘sunken gardens on the East Ter- ‘ raw. 1i.‘ - ‘he old-world charm of that ' typical London house, i9 Hill , Street, makes a perfect setting for ~the social debut of Princess .,‘.Augusta ofI-lesso. WDOiilG following ,§}¢ example, of Princess Ingrid , of -.i weden by “comfng out" re Tele- lciiiuicznv SALE 0F LAND ON ELM AVENUE. CHARLOTTETOWN- . Notice is hereby given that pursu- lnt to Order of the Court of Chan- scery, made by the Honourable. F115 Nice-Chancellor, in the matterof John A. Locke and others, Complain- .355, and Lemuel Gordon Locke, Dc- “iendnnt, No. D 291, I Will Set Up And Bell by public auction on the ‘premises on Thursday, the 26th day I "July, 1934‘, at the hour of ‘l2 flies; noon, two ' tracts" of land Q11 the west side of ‘Malpeque Road, described as follows: (l) Commenc- ' ' on the west side of said Roa QI" Elm Avenue) at a=point 61 feet 6 __ ches northerly from Reserve eat, being the northeast ansle o! Jnnd formerly conveyed to Henry M. 'O‘ha.ndler, thence westerly parallel ‘with Reserve Street, 80 feet, thence ‘northerly parallel with said Road, so feet, thence easterly parallel with said Street, B0 feet to said Road. thence southerly along said Road to the place of commencement; (2) Commencing at the northeast angle , pf land above described, thence west- erly along the northern line and continuation of same. 5 chains and, T00 links. thence northerly along the ‘rear line of lots fronting on said ‘ Itoad, 1 chain and 70 1111198. thence ' iisterly parallel t0 the first men- ‘tfoned line to said Road and thence] "southerly along said Road to the place of commencement, containing one lcre of land a littlemore or less; Iaservlng thereout two lots fronting on said Road, namely, a. lot formerly xmnveyed by Charles E. Robertson to Elizabeth Houston and Sarah Harris (now in possesison of Harry W. Cud- more), lying along the northern sida of a gangway 9 feet in width, for the distance of B3 feet and extending northerly 36 feet 6 inches, to an- other gangway of the same width. and length; And another lot in pos- ' session of William J. Hillier lying a- olong the northern side of the last mention ‘- gangway and a line in continuation thereof for the distance of 100 feet, and extending northerly B2 feet to land of Albert Douse, And Subject Also to the rights of way of the owners or occupiers of said pro- perties adjoining. on said gangways: The laid tracts of land to be sold oapamelv. under thc direction and pltjoct to the approval of the said Court of Chancery, and free from all encumbrances. Conditions of hie "For further particulars apply to ‘ Beam. McLean d: McKinnon, Com- r ants‘ Solicitors, or to the un- , eraigned. D. EDGAR. SHAW, Master in Chancery. 10-12-14-17-19-21-81. e ‘ fashioned were the daintiest things ‘, imaginable. M DOG AS MOTHER FOR TIGERS, born t0, Four cubs have been 1 Susan, a five-year-old Bengal tigress, at Bzxstol Zoological Gardens. She has disownecl them,| ihowever, and they now have as foster-mother a. Welsh collie bitch, by whom it is hoped that they will be successfully reared. HOLY ISLAND GHOST Ghosts, as a rule, are a source of1 , woixy to pcople troubled by nerves.‘ but up at Holy Island, off the Northumberland coast, there is a: ghost who is no worry to anyone but himself (says the Morning Post.) He is supposed to be thc wraith of a modiacval monk, al-i‘ i ways heavily cowled. and from! time to time he appears bearing a, book which he seems to be anid- ous should be rcadi to him by the persons to whom he appears It is not clear whether he is an. igiioramus who mzbsqucradcd as a monk. and as a. punishment must ’ always strive to read that which he i cannot: or that he is. as a school- , boy suggests, an acolyte who is) | perpetually in difficulties with his homework i Anyhow, there he is, and it would be an act of charity if somebody i would oblige the spook by reading what he requires and thus allowing i him to gain that real rcst which is t | obviously long overdue And if the stepmother has shown them love and tenderness and understanding, if she has been patient with them and dealt with them ,. wisely and fairly, they are an honor and a. 8101')’ to her and they P9P!!!‘ her with love and gratitude. Often they lovc hcr better than her own children do and are more considerate of her, because there is always the feeling in their hearts that. what she did for them was a matter of grace and not of duty. 311d m“ she was such a darn good sppraaboutzit ‘all; DOROTHY DIX- Dear Miss Dix-What do you thin-k of the chances of happiness 01 a woman who has been financially independent for a. long time and ac- customed to spending money freely. though not extravagantly, in marry- ing a man who is very stongy, very much of a l-ightwad. and W110 15 5° absorbed in making money and saving it that he barely takes the woman out to any place of amusement at all? The young man 15 B fi-Pe. 800d‘ looking chap with good manners and morals, but how will the 8H1 111w 115 ivhcn she has to look to a parsimonious husband for every dollar she needs? Is there any way to change such a man if one is clevcr enough? to pass i i i sleepless nights attending sick beds, what iti Melancholy Aunt Clara from the: country had the habit of listening to1 I have lived 1 1 age when they the bg c ocik on the Town Hall in the village where she was visiting and exclaiming, every time it struck: "Eternity draws one hour nearerfli Clarence was very much impressed, i with that solemn reflection. One dayl the big clock got out of order. While i repairing it the workmen made it strike every few minutes. Clarence heard it with bulging eyes. i , “ h, Aunt Clara," he said, exclfed- I ‘ly, “eternity has got a move on t0- day." i A COUNTY flabby. 0n coming to a hill, got down and violently banged: the door, to the consternation of his fare inside, who asked why he did it. "Why, sir it's to make the horse believe you got out’, whis- pered the driver. - MADE Answer; I No woman is clever enough to pick a. padlock with a hairpin, i there is no use in her wearing herself out trying to do so. l Miserliness is one of the most incurable of all the faults and it is one i that grows upon a. person, so it is folly to dclude yourself into thinking that you can change a. stingy sweetheart into a» liberal husband. It can't be done. No husbands are harder to live with than those who horde every penny and who begrudge the price of a, family. They make their wives miserable by always pecking in the garbage can to see if the potatoes have been peeled too thick and snooping in the iccbox to sce it anything is going to waste. They always criticize her for her extravagance whenever she buys even the most necessary articles for the upkeep of the house. They humiliate their wives by making them come like beggars for every cent, and they take the pleasure out of everything by counting the cost and moaning over it. A stingy husband is bad enough and, hard enough for a woman to endure who has never known anything but financial dependence, but, he l5 impossible for the woman who has had her own pocketbook and spent her Elfilificifllly if she happens to be open-handed own money as she pleased. herself. A tight hand goes with a tight heart and tight sympathies, and these have no place in marriage. The very first requisite of a good husband II generosity. A wifc wants to feel that her husband gives to her freely and that his only regret is that he hasn't, more to give, that he would like to hand her the world on a silver solver if he could. Better pass up your tightwad. He is a poor bet. l I O I I I Dix. Dear Dorothy Dix—My brother, aged 9, intelligent and a line little fellow in every other way, has bccn taking money out of his brother's purse. I have tried to stop him by telling him it is wrong and trying to ‘P985011 Wllh him. and he did quit for a while, but has gone back to it. My mother never gives him a Penny and when he earns any money she taikes it away from him. Do you think that. his not having any spending i 11101193’ 15 milking him a thief? I do not want to tell mother because she ‘MWBYS E068 1111011?- flvfirylhlng the wrong way, and if she knew about it she would beat him. What can I do? DESPERATE Answer: ' ' Undoubtedly thc child steals in order to get, a. little spending money. Why don't you give him a little allowance 50 that he may not be so tempt- ed beyond his power of resistance? But. keep on trying to instill the prlnciplescf honesty in him. DOROTHY m}; ns -:- .......ANYBODY? When Canadian berries are in season . . . that's the time to doubly enjoy your dail Shredded Wheat. Put a generous portion of the de idous, sun-ripened fruit on the crisp, golden-brown biscuits . . . pour cream or milk IN CANADA A BUSINESS WOMAN‘ The man sat. facing thc girl at her desk, and she resolved not to look at him again, but the attraction or The Million .ByC.N.G7A. repulsion twhichever it was) over- came her, and once more she met the cyes. This time hers photo- graphed the face more distinctly than evcr; a repellent face. Perhaps, yet one that she would have been drawn to study if she could have studied unseen. Dollar Doll M. Williamson CHAPTER 9 NOT A MILLION DOLLAR DOLL the placid temperament which can Terry’ did not know what to make of her iile at the Blue Moon. After the peacc of the Convent it was pandcinonium: noise, noise, from twclvc, midday, till long after twelve midnight. Tcrrencc Desmond grumbled that “pussyfootfi had ruined him, but lack of liquor-if there was a lack-did not seem to interfere with business at the Road House. 'I'hcre wcrc cruzvzls for luncheon- Cl‘0\\.'(is oi whilc-laced. pink-checked girls. like big dolls, and their cs- Icoris, often old men. or very young i VHIERE NELSON BOUGHT HIS HOSE T12 shop in the Strand whore Nelson bought his silk stockings may still bc sccn, although thc old , facade will shortly give place to a‘ new frontage. The gallant sailor walked in one day after he had lost his arm in a fight with a treasure ship off Cadiz. and was mct with i the sympathy and rcgrct of the‘ proprietor over his misfortune 1 “Lucky for you it was not a leg," said Nelson, “Y‘see, I want. another damn pairs of silk stockings." Nelson's orders in writing are still preserved in the old shop. THE COOK'S CORNER BLUEBERRY PUNCH I-Ialf cup granulated sugar, 1 cup water, 1 quart fresh blueberries or 2 cups canned berries, juice of 2 lcm- ons, ‘a cup pineapple juice, l quart; igingcr alc, and sprig of mint. Make a syrup by boiling sugar and water for l0 minutes. If fresh berries are used. carefully sort and wash them. Add to syrup and cook until berries nrc fender-about, 10 minu- , tcs. 11f canned ocrrics are uscd, cook zsyrup 20 minutes and tliiz-n add ber- ‘ries with juiceJ Prcss through a ilno strainer to remove pulp and seeds‘ Add frult juices. Chill thoroughly, Just bcforc serving add ice-cold gin- yger ale. Place a stirig of mint in leach glass. This makes 8 to l0 serv- .0a ones with foolish iiices. In the afternoon more motorists would drive up, demanding lcmon- adc or tea. and they would sit smok- i mg whilc thc band jilaycd, as it ncvcr failed to play at all hours of thc day or night. Crowds again for the celebrated fish dinner; and greater crowds for the supper dance. The jazz music startled Terry when shc first heard it, and irritated hcr ncrvt-s. Slic thought it like some tragedy among pots and kctilcs in the kitchen. Even when she was permitted to Solhes Skin go to bed she could never s.ccp till the small hours, and hers was not It was’ Terry found’ wonderfully’ intellectual for a Blue Moon client. The forehead was high, if narrow, framed in thick black hair streaked with grey. The brilliant eyes were deep set, under heavy brows. The nose was strong and big, the cheek bones prominent; one would have said, a writer or speaker on strong subjects strongly felt, though the lower part of the fact destroyed imake up for lack of rest, with a late -moi'nuig nap. Hcr health suffered iand the little sleep she got was ibroken with hateful dreams; dreams {of men's faces, especially their eyes. There were eyes that stared in the restaurant, eyes that shc avoided byi bending over hcr work, but could feel t through the top of hcr head, sharp . , . a ‘as glmlets: they came through the I iggfwigp‘gsfil°'};e,ii,y“f§wflg,§fiulg,gf wall of hcr room in dreams, and the ,- trudmg jaw were covered with a horror was that they drew nearerl a and nearer to hcr own face until tgfiikangegerg’ but the “pa. she struggled awake with a gasp. 1 In tho dreams she felt that, if they i Down (ii-tipped irrtanys 1.0m: lashes’ | _ . , ,nnd she tiitd to .oiget the man. But touched hei, she would dic. Bu. 1 {when she lay awake in thc morning ‘she dcou d got put mm out of h" . .. " ,min . W y should an intelligent thinking of those dreams, they seem- ied stupid. She could not understand 15,??? ciflfifinghngge lgsbtyhfitgilnllllygplelfifi or define her dislike of thc look in PM, did? ' I !Z‘t’;$*r§ "lms "We'- m°"° ma" 1"‘ By and by, without raising hcrl " (ycs, the girl became conscious that‘ It was only a silly, dead-fish sort her vis a vis had riscii and walked‘ ?i’..i.°.°“.'.§."°.i.‘i.‘€‘l.f'ii‘é‘.il'éi.iilf‘li°li inhibit“ iglrl seemed to know somethinglbacLi "Meet! my daughter-my little‘ Ieven dangerous about it, which lnamcsakc. TCFOSH~MIK Nnzlo," he jseemcd nonsense when she was Isaid: and added. Nazlo has “will”; f th pe l h t nd “W? ‘$5.3’. “.’i’.“°.~.“‘.°°.-°°‘“i§“' oso eopewoaea me. sers ime e’s danced at the Blue Moon appeared to been here. He dropped in by accid- be rather common and unintelligent ent, but he says he means to come according to a convent-loomed back. I hope he will. He's a big man, stflidards]. judges frgm Cftlietfigllvlff- as fine an ékmericilm as a Greek, and sa ons s c over ear . an s y- we're prou to we come him." lurking that went on among the Nazio laughed. It was early, and livelier clients. ifew of the tables were occupied. He But one evening the girl looked up icould stand and talk to the cashier (she seemed somehow compelled to at her desk without being remarked. look up) and met a pair of eyes from’ "Thank you," he said in a deep "States. urged the Champlain Val- a different world, A queer little stab shot through her nerves. She did not like the eyes. But they were not common. It occurred to her that they were magnetic as the eyes of a black cat. And they were much the same color; a gi-eylsh greenish yel- low. Though she looked down as quick- ly as she had looked up. the girl saw the eyes between her and her paper, as one sees bright spots after gazing attho sun. The table at which the man had sat, down to dine was so close to her desk that the ncarness . of the eyes was an unpleasant re- ' minder of the dream, and she kept an impression of their color with startling clearness. There was, however, one consol- atlon in knowing them so near- they had not that foolish, dying fish look. These eyes were alert, and bright with intelligence of a sort. irriaioiis 1 voice. "I hope you'll yvclconic me, too, ‘Miss Desmond. And I hope I didn't ,iinnoy you, seeming to stare. I didn't, 'mcan to be rude. But-I suppose [other people have remarked how like iyou are to-a. well-known young lady mond‘s relief, "but wc all admire her. She's mighty pretty. "But—if you'll let me say so—" the bowed to Terry) "you could Ive‘ €ICY points. You're years you ger,, 0o." ' ,“My daughter's scvcntccn." said‘ Terrence. "Just seventeen, and just» out of a Convent!" ' Terry felt unpleasantly that her father was showing her off. Nazlos eyes sent out a flash. "A convent maiden!" he echoed, "Why, we oughtirt to speak of hcr in the same breath with the Million Dollar Doll, ought we, Mr. Dgs- mond?“ wTo Be Continued.) U.S. Representatives Seek Ratification Seaway Treaty BURLINGTON, Vt. July l7—(A. P.)—ClIl1mplOIi5 of the St. Law- rcncc Seaway Treaty with Canada, tuidauntcd by its defeat in the United states Senate last March. today launched a campaign to bring about its ratification wlthLn a year. A host of speakers, lcd by Rep. Bertrand H. Siicll of Potsdam, N.Y. who characterized it as thei key to the future prosperity of the. northeastern part of the United i lcy council to work for the project as a boon to business and prosper- ity in both the middle and north- eastern states. The council, composed of repro- sentatlveg of chambers of commerce in New York State and Vennont, went on record as favoring the treaty and adopted a suggesting an amendment to it. which would open a waterway (imam the St. Lawrence, through Ioke Champlain and the Hudson River to New York City. Snell. who has worked for treaty prior and since its defeat in the Senate told the summer meet- ling of the council he was for it because "I think it is economically {Juliet Divine? I wonder if you ever saw her?" i Terry met a warning gleam in her ‘father's eyes. He answered, to give ‘her a cue. "Miss Divine has been here once or twice, but that was be- fore my daughter finished school. Teresa's been working to help her old dad, only three months. S0me-' body told me that Miss Divlnes Europc~or South America, maybe- ; coins I resolution . the 1 A ALALAA BEFORE i v . . . there's “a dainty dish to set before a king". Shredded Wheat gives you the viral, nourishing elements of whole wheat, with the added luxury of your favorite fruits, all in natural form. M...»- CANAIIIAN SHREDDED WHEAT OGIPINY, LTD. lingo Falls, Canola i tariff“ JULY 19. 1934 M’ ‘T? "r 1I—"AAL titre SHRD w OF CANADIAN WHEAT and FAC-‘TNA TING SUMMER STYLES Illustrated) Dressmaking Lessons FurnisheQ With Each Pattern Here's a distinctive model - so smart and comfortably cool. Easy to make! It would be diffi- cult to find anything more simple with its raglan sleeves and plain. pocket-trimmed skin. It's collar- less. tool Besides tub silks, many cottons and linens are stunning in this model. ‘Two-toned shirting stripes in either silk or cotton are sportive. Dotted linen would be lovely. too. Gay seersucker checks. pique in plain or prints, table cloth plaided linen, soft handkerchief-finish lawn prints, plaided gingham, etc, are other fabrics for your choice, Style No. ~11 is designed for sizes 14, l6, 1B years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size i6 requires 3% yards of 39-inch material. Price of PATTERN 15 cents 1'5 stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) Wrap coin carefully. N0. 416. Size .. Namo i Street Address “What's the difference bctwecn a drama and a melodrama?" "Well, in a drama the heroine merely throws the villain over. In a. melodrama she throws him over a. cliff." SUMMER COMPLAINT CAUSES MANY DEATHS .. AMONG INFANTS Thousands of mothers throughout Canada have used during the ast 88 years Ill l!!! nn tho market, and their child's lifo prolmhly saved by its time] use. _ Price 60o. a bottle at a druggista or dealers; put u_p onl by The T. Milhurn Co., Limited, onto, Ont. Department of Public Works and Highways SEALED TENDERS will be rec- oivod at this office until noon of Saturday, July 28th, for the con- struction of Hall's Bridge, Vlclorh. Specifications may he seen at flu: iealdenco of F. A. Wotmn, Victoria, or at this office. lowest or any ten- der not. necessarily accepted. Tend- ers to be marked "Tenders for Hall's Bridge, Vlctorll." . L. B. MmcMILLAN, Deputy Minister of Public Works and Highways. - Charlottetown, l‘ Island, July l6, I934. L-6933-'l—18-5l. L. O. A. ATTENTION-MEMBERS OI‘ BIIDEQUE DISTRICT You are asked to kindly attend n so Teresa won't get a. chance yet to - judge the resemblance." "Miss Divine back. I saw her walking down Fifth Avenue a couple of days ago," said Nazlo. "I don't know her personal- ly," he went on, perhaps to Des- must have come’ meeting in Berfheller Lodge Room, Summer ' . nn Thursday. July 19th ill 8 P. M. Bro. Robert While, Tor- onto. Field Man, Insurance Depart- ment, will address the meeting. A full attendance is requested. (Slgngdi D. M. BERNARD. L—6942—7-l8-2l. i — i__’;_" -.;...—;_:_._ _...'_~;-—"= ,FOR SALE Several used waillms- Boln No. ‘I. Four inch ill’!- BATHURST rowan a warm OOIVIPANY, LIMITED. Bathurat, N. B. 1_,_61l50-6-28-'I‘hu-4l. FOR_SALE Excellent Business Stand riidli l‘ Mum“ station, seven miles l (lharlotiotown, consisting of’ l0 h. house with electric light and plum ing. Store and Post Office. 3 Ell pumps. Splendid coal business wit 12001) lbs. Fairbanks 5011109- double garage. burn. three at buildings with 23 acres beat. 1111a- gprings, never failing water 811W iii health only ream“ 1'" "11 a I u» m" n. c. WEBSTER, Mil CLARKE sruAMsniP CO.. LTD. S. S. “ Giispesi" " Leave “d” ‘ Montreal CWT“ July 24 - --1“1.! Aug, ‘I Mll- S. S. “Vlhnnn” [nave Montreal u rivo i irTowfl Leave l0! 5i, John‘! Jul 1.1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. July h“; 3 ,,,,, All!- Carvell Bros», Md- Charloltefnwn Agents L-674l-7-thursday ti. __4 iQuick-Cookiig) has finer flavor and food value because it's “Pan-Dried"