Lite robin re ,Woman’s Realm -:- Social . and Person;a'l -:-‘ Fas-lgrions ,-:- l‘ . iiTuoussu/zm. and age has mellowed them; oaad ivory and wood, to the dimolved biacklead. Apply _ when the stove is cool; then pol- ish. Turpentine mixed with stove "polish, to make a liquid, will give the stove a lard polish, and a wonderful gloss. 1t must be ao- Ym-plied when the stove is cool. CRANBERRY WHIP . Doll I out! cranberries, i cup water, l 1-2 cups sugar m a cov- Ied pan 20 minutes. Force "Iu-ough sieve, add 2 tablespoons pnnge Juice, cool until set. Whip ' with fork or beater, fold in fly beaten whites of 2 eggs. Pile sherbet glmaea. adding custard i egg yolks if desired. . inborn lsapssomawouldlilsetoknow Imtapinohofmeaan tartar, add- ji s. an as 1n ‘ tothenow6olnriiigsm _ placeolivegreenand moss - ‘gram have to be cited appearing 'A‘ daughter who gave her life to the Church is mentioned in ‘an un- usual clause in the £70,000 will of Captain Ashton Case, of Beckfcrd Hall, Tewkesbury, Eng. If Beckford Hall estate as a whole fails to realise a reasonable sum within two years it is to be offered to the Order of the Nuns of the Sacred Heart for whatever sum they are able to offer. In this event Captain Case de- sired that his daughter Cicely should be the first reverend mother in charge of the commun- ity living there. ‘ DIAUT! GITS Nothing pleases 'tl1e average beauty gadget gifts. Even if you woman more than cosmetic and can't afford to send ckpensive per- fumes and powders, you can make little items that are decorative on a ing table and useful as well. - If mother has no dressing table, you might buy an inexpensive un- ted, one and, sometime be- now and Christmas, have Dad lacquer it to match her room. Put an attractive ruffled skirt on it, add a. really good minor and the ideal gift is ready. g Individual powder puffs make nice ifts. too. Simply buy a. large roll cotton, divide it into small round balls and paste a thin piece of heavy, shiny colored paper ac- crom the top of each one. Wrap a couple of dozen with different colored tops and tie with e. huge Christmas bow. 1f you like. fill e. glam powder Jar with the little A long-ironclad powder Puff may be fashioned from ‘an eight w sine inch stick and» a. plain colored puff. Wrap the stick with l fasten Oedimportancethllblllfliis ,, _ etimes in combination with yellow and brown, or white. Blue h stoned in very dark almost black tones as well as in ocrnblus- drarle. Band colors are fsvmed on qaortswear. Red has been strongly revived. Rant brown and rust red an also much in evidence. Tailored Jersey blouses of delic- ate slightl brushed materials are kept in li t pastel shades. of it. that Mother has picked out for him for a wife. No, indeed is some silly little flapper whose knowledge of cooking consists in shaking up a cocktail, and who hasn't asccond dress to her name. see the sober, solid chap who could give her a. fins house and a limousine and a charge account at the best stores. who is father's selection of a hus- band for her. she elopas with a handsome nder-do-well who ratas about zero as a husband. bands and wives would be a flop is because the r ing husbands and wives doesn't seem iowin out any oftener than picking them out on a hunch. makes her daughetr give up a. poor boy in order to man-y some rich man who can provide for her, that the rich man loses his money and the poor boy makes a fortune‘! magéar woman marries some one who is "suitable" that the marriage ends in no. ' u Letter Social Service Bureau for Selecting Husband; and Wives Would Not _ Prove Successful m Most Cases . l 4 Dear Miss Dix-I am a man Just past i0. I lraveyncver married be. causslcouldnotsupportawiieinawsylccnsidered d t _ standard of living when I was young. and since I have imfirsfinfifi I have not seen a womanwlrom I wanted to fix? {gm I tlwuaht would at um» my is siifiwéfi? ‘°'1'&'i2'.*.‘.'2°..”‘...“‘.,.‘,"°.’.§2,‘“°" - 0 men "d "@911 ‘like myself who are unmarried because we have never met our mates, and there are thousands of misfit marriages that are brought about by narrow acquaintance- ahip and social restrictions. This has made me wonder why we might not have a Nat- ional Social Bervice Bureau handled on a ma‘ emw“! PM". with some such confiden- "fll "Bevan u is dwabv Dun s; Bradstreet m m‘ bum“! W014i. Whose mission it would be W brine the risht people together. Those interested could fill out a questionnairs mat would be registered in a central bureau, stating their own qualifications and what they desired socially, educationally, “ ‘ ally in a husband or wife- This would be a scientific method of reaching fine people marooned in cities and villages and in the country. you think of the idea? , , temperament- What do A. E. Answer: It is a grand idea and perhaps after the Government gets through regimenting us about everything else on earth it will take up our love sf- iairs and established a. W. T. M. (want to marry) Bureau and provide us all with scientifically selected and wives. But I doubt that the plan would work for two reasons. One is that people are persnickety about marrying and want to pick out their hus- bands and wives for themselves, and they never by any chance fancy the woman or man that everybody thinks ‘is Just the one they should have Why, it is enough to break oi! any marriage for the family to approve John never marries the nice domestic girl with a fat little fortune His choice Mamie can't And a second reason why a Social Service Bureau for selecting hus- “ I system of choos- Did you ever notice how often when a mother And you must have observed how often when "a And how could you tell whether you would like a man or woman for a life companion Just because he or she possessed the standardized virtues? A woman might rate a hundred par cent as to looks, intelligence, domes- ticity, family. social position, etc, yet have little mannerisms and pecul- iarities that would be unbearable to live with. A man might be a Joseph andapillarofthcchurchandabank Husbands and wives are a matter of taste Just as much as onions, and. ii you like ‘em, you like ‘em. and, if you don't you hate ‘em. president; yet bore you to tears. But you are right about its being s. traged! ‘that those who are pre- destined mates so often do not meet. In ovary community there are lonely men and women who have never married because they have‘ never found any one who fits into their lives. none whose soul responded to their own. Worse still, there are thousands of - who are miserable and dissatisfied because they married the wrong ones. It is all very sad, but I do not know what can be done about it. DOROTHY .,, husbands and wives DIX. IUUUUO Dear Miss Dix-I have s. charming and very intelligent wife. Bhe amid be a bis mat i0 me 1n my business career, but she is extremely stubborn about one thing. In our early married life we made many friends, good enough folks in their way, but they simply do not fit info the advanced social status we have attained by my rapid financial process. But my wife insists clinging to some of these people and spending a lot of time with them which she should be devoting to culti sting people who could be of great assistance to me in a business way. has no objactionto ‘-' men and women, but that she would rather be poor all her life than spend her time cultivating stodgy and financially. the point. can, even if it means dropping her old associates and makmg herself agree- sbal tic file people wlioaaffirndship will push his success. Don't you II" . _ Anawti v She says she new frien ds provided they are fine, interesting bores who happen to be important socially I tall has that whether they are bores or not is beside A wife's plain duty is to assist her husband in every way she J. B- S. Certainly a woman should help her husband by making herself agree- able to his business associates even if they bcrfi her and she has nothing in common with them, but on the other hand, to sacrifice the society of the people she loves and enloya for them. ahasnorighttoaskher You are overlooking one thing that your'wifa has intelligence enough to realise, and that is that the friends that you made in you rearly years WM! W" W9" D00!‘ Ind Ilflllsliflg. and when you had nothing to give but yourselves, are you REAL friends. They are people who like you for yourself, not for what they can get out of you or for what you can do for them. They would stand by you in misfortune, but these new friends for whom you are going to forsake your old ones are Just fair-weather friends. As long as you are on the mp of the wave they will ride it with you. They will eat your good food parties, but let the tide turn and misfortune wreckyou and they will drop you are easily as they picked you up. , mink your champagne, go with you on whoopee Itriendship loses all of its sacre‘ and meaning when you make of it nothing but a ladder on which to climb and that you kick down behind lrd Sat 0f Twins you when you have risen to the top. I have known many people like you who cast ofl their old friends as soon as they got up in the world and who catered and fiunkiad to the people above them and whom they meant to use, but they were never really taken into the inner circle. They were never more than e acquaint- ance. Nobody really cared for them. 8o in the and they were left irimdless. m, after all, nobody ever loves a snob. . DOROTHY DIX. Loss of Slep Due to Inability Relax Faaraiandworrleaarobadbadfallowa. ‘ Thayaapthonorvosaaayatamoftlaevltalnagyg Feather in ‘Her Hot - mind how I know. He stopped at a field outside Chicago and took the Senator and Carl on bcard——" "No . . .i" Ann cried. "He couldn't-have, Hollie. Les last night. "I'm telling you, honey. 'l.‘hey'rs due at the airport around three. If you're not at the hotel, take your mother there and -meet me here at The Globe as quickly as possible . . . The police are goinB to arrest Carl the minute they land. And they'll keep Lee busy for the time being ‘which means there won't be any wedding bells tomor- row. l-Iurry up now." let them arrest Carl and ques- tion Lee all they liked, Ann told herself as she made her way back to her mother. Bhe had been steel- ing herself t0 go through with it this week-end and she certainly didn't mean to make it more diffi- cult by putting it oil’. Lee did not arrive at the Wash- ington airport around three, how- ever. At the moment that Mollie f ' hed her conversation with Ann. Lee was getting to work on his motor . . . What the trouble was, he had no idea. Ten minutes after they posed over Frederick, Maryland, the motor cut out- dead. And now, here they were, miles from nowhere with not a house in sight. While he made a routine check to discover the trouble, lea heard Carl's voice ing on endlessly. ‘Bo was back on c mfuade now, as; cusing every one o ce . d the worst of it was, he was drinking. He had a bottle in his bag. . Just as Lee discovered that feed-line was completely clogged. and he let himself down to the ground, ~0arl came up, Carl had insisted upon getting out of the plansandhadbeenlyingonhis back on the ground alternately singing and talking. "Listen, Lee old pal," Carl said. as he staggered nearer. "You're a good old pal. You did me a big favor once. I'm going to show you I save —— avl>¢<>i—— an» dammiti-du-pre-ci-ate. That's the word. I'm going to tell you the truth. You want to know who bumped oi! Fuhrman and Deane. You want, to know? Well, listen II laughing, Ice pulled Oari tn- ward the open cabin door. "Get inside and tell the Sena‘ about it. Carl. ‘that's the boy." Levelling of! at twenty-live hund- red feet a little later, Lee glanced inthe mirror audgrinnsdashe saw Carl bending toward the Sena- tor, t li-ks a machine. illus- trating wl h sweeping gestures. 'I‘he city of Washington lay spread out before them when Lea hearcitha little door behind him opanandturnedtofindCarlteet- Asring on the single stop. "rho aerator-the great Bens- toawilrm-brrr-ecker won't t'kncw if the treat Les Monday, my old pal, lee Monday, will sbircle the great Washington Monument . . ." Isa pinned. "I get you," he said, "Go sit down now before you tum- ble overboard. "Ho looked back at Senator Runbrecksr and saw him nod, rapidly. Leg had completed a wide circle yar of the Mall and was taming toward the airport. he ‘ straight for the monument, when he felt a Jar and locking back saw Carl kick- ing violantly at the cabin door and at the same moment became aware of the look of horror on Senator Runbrecker’: face. Quickly bee pushed open the door behind him and shouted at the top of his voice. Carl, strangely sober, wheeled around. Then his head wobbled and he grinned. "Howdycu get the door open. old palsy . . J" he called back. "Don't want to open it, you know . . . Just want to know how---" “Slt down!“ Leo cried. angrily. For a moment Lee glanced down from their, relatively low altitude _ of fifteen hundred feat and aaw thewhita marble shaft lelthan atbousand feet below and suddenly somethingclickedlnhisbrainand heremembared what should have ccourredtohimiongagdhut he had remembered it too late, for WIIEIIIIOIHOIIIQIIDIIUIIIIIQ '8 g twmtyfaatclmaeatraacetothe marbladialt. Hollis Jumped to her feet and ran outside. Ann remembered . . . "Senator Runbnoker has Just fallen from the top of the Washington Monu- ment" . , t "Ann . . .1" - Ann looked up. Selma Run- brocker was standing in the door- waymanswertothequeationin Ann's eyes, aha laid, plaintively, “I've been in Baltimore, I had in go somewhere, to think-end to get away from Carl. I was gfraid. "Ihen you-weren't Hdnappedt" "No, no—-of course not. That was another of Carl's tricks. He hour Mo. Rita told me about Fath- er and Carl going to Chicago to pay a seventy-five thousand dollar ronscm. She didn't know if they were coming back with Lee or not . . .whattimeial.ecnipposedw get here?" ‘rhen Balms didn't know. A lump rose in Ann's throat. She said. “I think the plane's Just-come in, Selma. Mama's out there . . ." Lee's plane was Just coming tn a stop when Ann ‘ ‘ The men crowding about the closed senses” TROPICAL a» MOONLIGHT VMIR-o-Kisans Hos|e|iv..35,g MADE IN CANADA n Karon ‘vans aaauhavluva no. aaamu KAYSER STOCKINGS . . . . stool‘? LINGERIE SOLD IN CHARLOTTETOWN _.BY._ . Moore £6 McLeod Ltd. pliaiginclotgzlndetoflcotivexs? 85181:: rig-fr" A SAL suddenly opened, and a moment HUNTER RIVER, N0“ g0", later LesMonday dropped to the ground and moved oi! toward the The undersigned offers for sale at terminal building. Then another figure filled the cabin migyaadfi PUBLIC AUCTION concerted-they saw Senator Run- Haggai]? - 0|] NOVEMBER 20th At 1 0’c|ock bhecker. All his stock, crop, fol-m. l THE HOME ge the aspect of last year's dies by A new collar and new cufla, too, if you please- are four ways dress, pattern includes all the styles "buttons on." ‘pllited Jabot Sik crepe satin crepe, metalics. velvet, valve . taffeta. etc, are interesting materials for their de- velopmcnt. You can make two or three of them to wear with the same dress to give variety to your wardrobe at little extra cost. Style No. 47B comes in one size only. ‘ Price of PATIERN l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) WraP coin carefully. No. 4n Bile v~ooaaaalaa"laaassa-naaleaalllaaalll “l!!! ' IIIlIIlQllI'IolI-so--aalallllillolil Address City as-sn-uw-a-sa-ns-n. AMomingSvnllc and made‘ will. It was duly "Iliad. witnessed and sealed. Some lifys later the Irishman came back. ‘How now, Pat?" asked the law. "linhave come to sec you about m, Wm. Wll the mp1)’. “Faith, I huvg forgotten in it all about myself, 1 have given away everything and left %f not even a three-legged m»; m]. A CHANG! ‘IOMOBIOW Judas (traflio curt): "r111 of! with a fine this time, but“ other day 1'11 send you to Jail." Driver: "Sort c! a weather-forc- cast sentence, eh, Judge?" "What do you mggg w DrivsHTinfo-d -- . m .° 1y coolerto 7m" 000m column srroan saunas (Delicioaa was Cold lleatl while sugar, i cup vinegar or a lit- tls more, 3 teaspoons ground cloves. cinnamon. Boil iiigiilé 55.355? £225; r: » SMART CLOTHES i FOR‘ giving it a new neokline.] todlrangayouf s Shirt collar with straight, m. 4 m» collar and’ cuffs. Anlrishmanwent to uiawysr_ Ann licked her drp lips as aha (Continued on Page‘ Eight) Ing implements and house. hold furniture. Also at the same time the farms of the undersigned consisting of fifty acres and 22V; acres will be offered. The farms are well situaied with good buildings, the smaller farm having a new modern dwelling and barns, 9 months credit on approv. ed joint note and 5 per um discount for cash. EDWARD MARTIN, Owner M93‘ M153", Auctioneer. . L 2502-11-5-9-12-16 DRESSMAKER ram run sue I am instructed to sell by Auction at gill“! Melville, no. "Nlllaill. on 1:11am’, the hlhatuznm. natal-mm. , _ "Wlwwrsaiula hataisof .1 u I ‘a bnudmloraled . ‘_ . h d/milmhh first clay ss I _. M, Allail-Irearolaesrersrsus . ‘ ' 101m r. nnanurv, ’ asss-n-s-ol. " TELL gm .,_..___: mm hr woaaoglarlllteaio m I'll I'll-army to stand c332. o: DI‘!!! line alum m ‘mic-Ll t your wa mix. Bake in two greased 3-inch layer pans at 350 degrees 80 minu- tee. i101‘ CHEESE CANAPEB An unusual recipe which may be prepared in the morning, placed on cookie sheets, and toasted at the last minute. These satful ‘ make delicious appetlaars. Mix it pound mild cheese. grated fine; 2 tabla- spons chopped green Delmar: "/1 a Bammeraide VAUGHAN 0300M, Rep. :3 Professional‘ Ganis McLEOD 8 BENTLEY w. a. sauna. x. o. ' ‘Ilen cups rhubarb out fine. I cups ‘ i; fl-g. small onion, grated ilne: 1% table- spoons snelted butter. i6 teaspoon salt, l6 teaspoon dry mustard, and a few grains of. cayenne. Spread on small squares of bread, which have been toasted on one side. Just be- fore wanted toast under the broiler. ‘This recipe makes 80 small cauapea. l For-Bad Cough, lMix This Splendid - Remedytat Home Needs No Cooking! 3Q gum“ I ‘ 'll be ‘ii-i. tfififEfili "33-‘336-"12 raaadtryitforadmco . Jtilnotronbgtomlflgg b‘ g IIOIU yet it m1§1'ik:§§i'-'uv'brar=m s 3m a . i A a dF-lftliiétsfiirfii . . at once but it into 701i! as made J. A. BINTLIY. K. C. ll‘ fluUllflbll-LIW MONEY TO LOAN Oflloa: 180 Blfllllllflld Street- W=:—-————-—-———-——.__-* ‘=5 LA. llatlionald, Kt. Ill-Ill!!!» BOLIOITOB. 0°- mafia. r. afar-ta. “ma.” fistzitsi“ mas-laser's“ MacGuim & Trainor Ill! l- ainn. ‘l0 LOAN Olin: ma: Provincial Bank. llelnaal Iliad. Gbarhu-u-vn- n. a. MacPl-IEE. B-A- sonar. lo. aaaaraaaa. aouorron ommggg‘ lfi Xi; BELL B’ MATHIESQN . - an. l-IJ‘